Hello!
> Such addresses are link-locals, of link local scope only. A link-local
> IPv6 address is awfully difficult to remember and type for all of your
> possible links.
>
> The only reasonable value user could supply is a global address.
So what? I do not see connection to previous. You want to live with global
addresses as nexthop? OK. But I remember you have spoken something quite
opposite yesterday.
> Please describe what you mean by "real IPv6 6to4 addresses".
...
> If the node processing those as a next-hop supports 6to4 and has the sit0
> pseudointerface configured, the address will be but through the special
> handling.
>
> If the node doesn't support 6to4 or doesn't have the sit0 pseudointerface
> configured, the address will be processed as normal, as any other IPv6
> nexthop.
>
> Right?
I do not understand why did you ask previous question. You answered to
this.
> Redundant information can be ignored. This is not computer science
> theory, removing everything which is not directly relevant. The use of
> the same representation for the next-hop (2002:F00:BA::x) as an address
> (2002:BA:F00:y) is the only logical, user-friendly way.
What a bullshit... The second is address of host "x". The first is supposed
to be address of host F00:BA, whatever it is. Probably, you can decrypt
this only because poisoned by computer science. :-)
Just to complete discussion, let's stay on format fe80::A.B.C.D, for example.
Unlike anothers it is 100% logically clean. :-)
Alexey
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