Hi Charles, On Sat, Jul 09, 2022 at 06:51:22PM -0600, Charles Curley wrote: > it is up to you to housebreak your applications to use IPv4 first.
If you find yourself having to do this, something is probably broken. Broken things do exist, but it is really quite rare. What you've written here makes it seem more like a given that everyone will face problems. In reality most people don't even notice, which is how it's designed to work. Amazon, Facebook and Google all have IPv6 addresses for all their various Internet properties. If there were any widespread issue with software on v4-only networks getting v6 DNS answers then they would not do this. > I do it in part by using my own resolver, BIND9, and having it > return only IPv4 addresses. What application do you have where this is necessary? This is a bug because when an application asks for DNS records for foo.example.com it can get back all sorts of records besides 'A' (IPv4 address), most of which have nothing to do with IPv6. So anything that complains that it got an 'AAAA' record (IPv6 address) as well as an 'A' record is really very broken. If we dig into this I think it's likely we'll find this is not necessary and at worst a misconfiguration exists somewhere else. DNS is designed to work on IPv4-only networks. Cheers, Andy -- https://bitfolk.com/ -- No-nonsense VPS hosting