site_archiver@lists.apple.com Delivered-To: darwin-dev@lists.apple.com On Sep 9, 2006, at 11:13 , Dan Shoop wrote: -josh On Sep 7, 2006, at 6:18 PM, Andre-John Mas wrote: Hi, -dhan ------------------------------------------------------------------------ Dan Shoop AIM: iWiring Systems & Networks Architect http://www.ustsvs.com/ shoop@iwiring.net http://www.iwiring.net/ 1-714-363-1174 "The wise man doesn't give the right answers, he poses the right questions." -- Claude Levi-Strauss ------------------------------------------------------------------------ iWiring provides systems and networks support for Mac OS X, unix, and Open Source application technologies at affordable rates. _______________________________________________ Do not post admin requests to the list. They will be ignored. Darwin-dev mailing list (Darwin-dev@lists.apple.com) Help/Unsubscribe/Update your Subscription: http://lists.apple.com/mailman/options/darwin-dev/site_archiver%40lists.appl... At 11:25 AM -0700 9/9/06, Justin C. Walker wrote: At 6:24 PM -0700 9/7/06, Josh Graessley wrote: Content-Type: multipart/signed; micalg=sha1; boundary=Apple-Mail-7--1017169588; protocol="application/pkcs7-signature" If you are running Mac OS X, you can select "Off" for the Configuration method in the Network Preferences pane. I want to do some tests with regards to IPv6 to see how well certain services work on a pure IPv6 environment. Is it possible to disable IPv4 to prevent false positives in my tests? Andre I believe you can turn IPv6 off, but not IPv4. The poster seems to want to disable IPv4, not IPv6. Looks to me like Josh is correct: in the network prefs panel, select the interface in question, then click the TCP/IP tab, and select 'off' in the 'Configure IPv4' popup. IPv6 has a separate configure button, near the bottom. Thanks Justin for pointing that out. I normally like to look before I speak but missed that completely. -- This email sent to site_archiver@lists.apple.com
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Dan Shoop