On Mon, Jul 22, 2013 at 04:29:52PM +0200, Philip Homburg <philip.homburg@ripe.net> wrote a message of 23 lines which said:
The probe didn't actually send any packets so there is no point in knowing the source address that wasn't used. :-) I wanted to reply to Dan Wing's criticism <https://labs.ripe.net/Members/stephane_bortzmeyer/how-many-atlas-probes-believe-they-have-ipv6-but-are-wrong/> "I have a suspicion that many of these failures are IPv6 tunnels that have suffered bit rot. Could you analyze the IPv6 address that the Atlas probe thinks it has and split them into two categories: (a) known tunnels (e.g., Hurricane Electric, SixXS, 6to4, Teredo) versus (b) presumably "native" IPv6 addresses. " Yes, this is annoying. Many probes have IPv6 tunnels. Probably they show
On 22.07.2013 16:39, Stephane Bortzmeyer wrote: the "real world" view of IPv6, but often I am interested in native IPv6. When selecting probes manually I only use probes that are located in the same AS for IPv4 and IPv6. regards Klaus