Thanks Joshua, but what about absolute url’s being recorded in the database, and moving a database to another server. How do you keep a knowledge base portable through history.
Ken
On Mar 3, 2016, at 1:45 PM, Joshua Judson Rosen < address@hidden> wrote:
On 03/03/2016 12:18 AM, Kenneth Fields wrote:Hi, My server has both on ipv6 and ipv4 address. So it has domain names: anysite.io and ipv6.anysite.io.
If I’m on an ipv6 network, I can surf the site on ipv6.anysite.io If I have ipv4, I surf on anysite.io.
Originally, GnuS links were absolute links, so if I post on ipv4, the permalink is anysite.io/post. Or my user path is anysite.io/user1
thus the problem, If I am on ipv6 and click on the link, i switch back to being on an ipv4 network. That’s not the preferred behaviour I’m looking for.
So we changed all our code to work with relative paths. ipv6.anysite.io/user1 anysite.io/user1 is the same thing.
Am I managing this correctly?
Why don't you just create an AAAA record in DNS forthe same domain as you have the A record for,and then let the name resolve in whichever address-space(IPv4 or IPv6) is appropriate for the client?-- "Don't be afraid to ask (λf.((λx.xx) (λr.f(rr))))."
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