![]() ![]() Users may assume that IPv4 and IPv6 address queries for localhost names will always resolve to the respective IP loopback address. On the current updated and untouched Ubuntu 14.04. I understand your confusion indeed for what I read from the rfc6761 about 'Special-Use Domain Names' 6.3, about the name localhost. Users may assume that IPv4 and IPv6 address queries for localhost names will always resolve to the respective IP loopback address. Hostnames can resolve to both IPv4 and IPv6 addresses. I understand your confusion indeed for what I read from the rfc6761 about "Special-Use Domain Names" 6.3, about the name localhost, You may find ip6-localhost, ip6-loopback, ipv6-localhost, ipv6-loopback or localhost itself. ::1 localhost ipv6-localhost ipv6-loopbackįor what it concerns the alias currently used on your system you can check your hosts file, /etc/hosts or in a different place if on a different system. If you want to set localhost as alias for both ping and ping6 and it is not already so on your machine, it is enough to write in /etc/hosts file both the lines: 127.0.0.1 localhost In cmd. Ping6 ::1 # The used analogous of `ping 127.0.0.1` Each program, upon exiting, returns a number called an 'exit status' to the system (and to the parent program) by convention, 0 means success, and 1 means some sort of failure. ![]() Short answer ping6 ip6-localhost # Or the alias you have in /etc/hosts file (See below) 1 Accepted Solution Georg Pauwen VIP In response to njconnect 11-30-2018 02:48 PM Hello, you need to decide if you want one or both switches to be Layer 3. ![]()
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