Linux Kernel 5.3 Officially Released – Now, it has support for 16 millions new IPv4 addresses in the 0.0.0.0/8 range
by u/UnderEu in ipv6
https://twitter.com/sweatypaIms_/status/1172904667321233408
This guy has got skills pic.twitter.com/YtegsYFblA
— Giles Paley-Phillips (@eliistender10) September 14, 2019
rm -f * pic.twitter.com/nFQ8Cn2IL5
— Kareem Carr | Data Scientist (@kareem_carr) September 15, 2019
Have you tried disabling your IPv6 yet?
Not an impressive sentence… If that is the current status of networking at Ubisoft. 😐
Have a bajillion bgp peers and are having trouble wading through them to find the ones not in an Established state? #FRRouting just got a new command to help you debug this situation. pic.twitter.com/tfpWp04OkJ
— Donald Sharp (@menotyousharp) September 3, 2019
show bgp [afi] [safi] summary failed [json]
Show a bgp peer summary for peers that are not succesfully exchanging routes for the specified address family, and subsequent address-family.
http://docs.frrouting.org/en/latest/bgp.html#clicmd-showbgp[afi][safi]summaryfailed[json]
We currently have around 1.91 million IPv4 addresses remaining in our available pool. We expect to reach the end of this pool in the next few months, before the end of 2019. The exact date is not possible to predict as this depends on the rate at which new members/additional LIR accounts are opened.
Source: Getting Ready for IPv4 Run-out — RIPE Network Coordination Centre