Hi Mark,
How 'static' is your IPv6 address? According to the Comcast documentation I've
seen/read, it seems their customers are allocated a 64bit prefix that never changes.
Everything under that is apparently directly addressable, subject to your firewall
rules.
If that's the case, and you eventually get your IPv6 service back again, perhaps it
would be better to connect here (A29RT2, 29.2) via that route on port 60010. Firewall
rules here don't do DNS lookups - it's all IP address lists.
Keith
-----Original Message-----
From: Mark Berryman [mailto:mark@theberrymans.com]
Sent: 18 January 2023 17:53
To: The Hobbyist DECnet mailing list <hecnet(a)lists.dfupdate.se>
Subject: [HECnet] Re: Area 27 IP address change
Well, Comcast came out and did some work in my area yesterday and now my Internet is all
messed up. They say they are aware of the issue and will notify me when it is fixed but I
haven’t been able to get any further details.
Among other things, my IPv4 address changed again to 98.53.246.94 and IPv6 isn’t working
at all.
Mark Berryman
On Jan 16, 2023, at 9:34 AM, Mark Berryman
<mark(a)theberrymans.com> wrote:
I had a bit of a go-around with Comcast over the weekend. The end result is that my
addresses have changed. If you are one of my HECnet neighbors, my new addresses are:
IPv4: 73.95.34.4
IPv6: 2601:281:c100:6d0:3870:e9fa:b78e:abd2
These are also always available in DNS as
decnet.theberrymans.com.
Mark Berryman
Area 27
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