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threiwlast Saturday at 8:11 AM3 repliesview on HN

I fixed the problem once for all. Now my program even refuses to start, if IPv6 is enabled. I am not going to spend time debugging problem, that can be easily prevented. Pretty valid solution on private networks and local only kubernetes deployments.

If customer wants proper ipv6 support, we can sign a contract and talk about it. But do not expect me to support some technology for free, just because it is enabled by default.


Replies

eqvinoxlast Saturday at 8:17 AM

Nah, you didn't fix anything, you just moved the problem around.

(Worst case, you moved the problem to your finance department, for buying IPv4 address space. But even if you didn't do that, at some point sooner or later you'll get pressure to support IPv6. And then you'll have to "un-fix" everything you did, and fix the actual problem. Maybe it'll be after you're retire, but I wouldn't take bets on that.)

[ed.: best case, you moved the problem to someone else outside your company or scope. Good for you, I guess. Like the sibling post says, address space shortage is an issue for everyone, and personally speaking I would consider it rude to make it other people's problem.]

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john01davlast Saturday at 8:21 AM

This attitude is widespread enough to hold the world back by forcing everyone who interacts with the public Internet to support ipv4 (some technology), "for free". So, either way, we're forcing one of them. So, we might as well lean towards supporting the one that isn't hard capped at 4 billion addresses in a world with at least 2x as many devices. Have you ever tried to deal with NAT punchthrough? That's way more difficult to fix than having to properly configure your server.

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eddythompson80last Saturday at 9:03 AM

Yeah, I’ll sign a contract so you can “support” a configurable bind address. That’s post-doc level of comp-sci stuff right there.

I’ll also sign the “numbers bigger than 2^32” contract and a “weird looking characters in text” contract.