3

Is there some way to check if I have access to websites through IPv6?

1
  • Was the version you're on released within the last ten years? If so, it almost certainly is. All operating systems have supported it for over ten years.
    – tobylane
    Jan 29, 2011 at 22:56

5 Answers 5

3

For an end-to-end test, you can use http://testmyipv6.com/ to check how you connect by default. It also has a link for testing whether you can connect via IPv6 at all.

0

Run a script to listen for connections on port 80, then type http://[::1]/ into your browser. (Not tested, and this only checkes that you browser and OS supports IPv6, your ISP still might not)

2
0

Without running any third party tools, or having an IPv6 ISP, it is hard to actually to test yourself.

The easiest (but not the best) way is simply to look on Wikipedia or the browser's homepage and see if it says it is compatible.

Short of this, I would do what David X said - either use a script/web server that is IPv6 compatible, then go to the IPv6 localhost - http://[::1]/ and see if you access the site.

0

Here's one real easy way: Go to www.ipv6.org/. It'll say if you are using IPv6 and provide hints on how to get it working.

Another traditional test is www.kame.net. If you are using IPv6, you'll see animated turtle.

EDIT Whoops, I only read question body, not name and didn't see that OP is asking to see if browser has support.

2
  • All I get at the first page is a link to something that looks like Swedish.
    – eswald
    Aug 22, 2010 at 20:22
  • Strange. The site seems to be down. Had a typo in second address too, fixed now.
    – AndrejaKo
    Aug 22, 2010 at 20:24
0

There is a little free and useful tool to check if you are IPv6 ready: IPv6 Checker

IPV6 Checker can check your IPV6 connection readiness in few seconds. After the installation and without the need of online connections it will check your computer status and it will display the check result right on the main app interface.

enter image description here

You must log in to answer this question.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged .