I know that IPv6 was created in 1998 as a future-proofing, to make sure that there will be enough IP addresses in the works for large networks. IPv4 uses 32 bits and is represented with denary (0-9) while IPv6 uses 128 bits, so there are far more possible addresses, and it is represented using hexadecimal (0-9 then A-F).

What I’m wondering is why IPv4 is still so common, even though the number of devices connected to the internet have skyrocketed with more computers, laptops, smartphones, game consoles, embedded systems, etc. all connected! If it was thought that there would be too few available addresses in 1998, surely that has to be a bigger problem in the modern day?

Additionally, why didn’t IPv6 replace v4, even after nearly three decades of existing? Is it a technological limitation, cost, or something else?

And online I see many sysadmins online (!) complaining about IPv6 being more difficult to work with. Is this because the addresses are harder to remember, are adaptations of the protocol by manufacturers all different (similar to USB-C), or is there some other problem with IPv6? Or is this a case of a loud angry minority, especially in chat forums where people tend to have more polarised views?

Many devices do support IPv6, but it’s not universal like IPv4, despite the standard existing since 1998 and having many advantages. Why is this?

  • Björn@swg-empire.de
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    8 hours ago

    For me personally it’s unfamiliarity. Technically all my devices and networks use IPv6. But I just enabled it in my router and used my hosting company’s configuration.

    But one of my servers at home should be reachable from the internet but that is only through IPv4. Configuring port forwarding through my router was intuitive and straight forward. But for IPv6 I have to allow the port to be open, but I don’t want it to be the standard port so I have to configure the corresponding service on the machine itself to listen with a specific port on a specific address. But I have no idea what each of the addresses it has mean.

    I think some of them are purely internal, some temporary, some less so. And if I ever found out what to use I would then have to configure my DynDNS, which is currently just pointing to the public IPv6 address of my router but not to the server I would want to reach.

    I could learn all these things. But I just can’t be bothered because the IPv4 stuff still works.

    • orgrinrt@lemmy.world
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      8 hours ago

      At least you have ipv6 as an option…

      I will switch the second it becomes available here. Won’t hold my breath though…