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This is a liveblog of an AWS re:Invent 2017 breakout session titled “IPv6 in the Cloud: Protocol and Service Overview.” Global IPv6 adoption is currently around 22%, and is expected to hit 25% by the end of the year. T-Mobile, for example, now has 89% of their infrastructure running on IPv6.
For inbound connectivity, this is where Kubernetes Services come into play; you could have a Service of type NodePort (unique port forwarded by kube-proxy on every node in the Kubernetes cluster) or a Service of type LoadBalancer (which uses a cloud loadbalancer with nodes & NodePorts as registered backends).
This article contains some good information on IPv6 for those who are just starting to get more familiar with it, although toward the end it turns into a bit of an advertisement. Diego Sucaria shows how to use an SSH SOCKS proxy to access private Kubernetes clusters. I hope you’re able to find something useful here! Networking.
Vincent Bernat has a really in-depth article on IPv4 route lookup on Linux (and one on IPv6 route lookup as well). Jason Edelman of Network2Code also has a post on intent-based network automation with Ansible , in which he breaks down the idea of intent-based networking (IBN) and how tools such as Ansible or NAPALM can make it possible.
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