On Wed, 24 Mar 2010 18:42:26 EDT, Andrew Morton said: > On Wed, 24 Mar 2010 21:36:41 -0400 Valdis.Kletnieks@vt.edu wrote: > > > On Tue, 23 Mar 2010 15:34:59 PDT, akpm@linux-foundation.org said: > > > The mm-of-the-moment snapshot 2010-03-23-15-34 has been uploaded to > > > > > > http://userweb.kernel.org/~akpm/mmotm/ > > > > Seen in my dmesg. It may be relevant that I'm at home, and my IPv6 > > prefix arrives via a PPP VPN connection. This happened about 20-25 seconds > > after I launched pppd. > > Yes, thanks, I get the same - it doesn't seem to break anything. It > also happens some time after boot has completed. Just doing an 'ifup eth0' on a network with IPv6 on it is sufficient. And it does break stuff: % ifconfig eth0 eth0 Link encap:Ethernet HWaddr 00:24:E8:C6:AD:17 inet addr:128.173.14.107 Bcast:128.173.15.255 Mask:255.255.252.0 inet6 addr: fe80::224:e8ff:fec6:ad17/64 Scope:Link UP BROADCAST RUNNING MULTICAST MTU:1500 Metric:1 With 2.6.34-rc1-mmotm0309, I see: % ifconfig eth0 eth0 Link encap:Ethernet HWaddr 00:24:E8:C6:AD:17 inet addr:128.173.14.107 Bcast:128.173.15.255 Mask:255.255.252.0 inet6 addr: 2001:468:c80:2103:224:e8ff:fec6:ad17/64 Scope:Global inet6 addr: fe80::224:e8ff:fec6:ad17/64 Scope:Link UP BROADCAST RUNNING MULTICAST MTU:1500 Metric:1 Something ate my IPv6 address. We run a lot of IPv6 in production, so stuff is acting wonky.