:00
-:ff
Edit: Just learnt this can be also noted as:
::
-::f
What about IPv4
0.0.0.0 /0 ::/0
SUCK MY DICK, GRU!
Haha spot on
0.0.0.0/0
Better hope the goon hasn’t heard of IPv6 either, or you’re toast
::/0
Undefined
This is gonna take a while…
0.0.0.0
0.0.0.1
0.0.0.2
0.0.0.3
…
0.0.0.0/0
::/0
0.0.0.0/0
This reminds me of something I saw online maybe 20 years ago now. Someone created a torrent with a name like “every IP address ever (hacking tool)” and uploaded it to Suprnova, which ended up having thousands of people seeding it. It was just a text file with every IPv4 from 0.0.0.0 to 255.255.255.255 😂
Heard about that too! Is there an updated version for ipv6?
That file would be ungodly large. There are 2^128 possible addresses, each weighing in at 128 bits, 16 bytes. 16 bytes times 340 trillion trillion trillion. That puts us around 5.44 trillion Zettabytes. The estimates I’ve seen for worldwide data storage sit aroun 60-70 zettabytes.
IPv6 version is just a Python script that generates random 128-bit integers. Eventually you’ll hit a valid IPv6 address!
ipv4 [0,255].[0,255].[0,255].[0,255]
ipv6 [0000,ffff]:[0000,ffff]:[0000,ffff]:[0000,ffff]:[0000,ffff]:[0000,ffff]:[0000,ffff]:[0000,ffff]
This excludes all the ipv4 ips that have a 0 in the 2nd, 3rd, and 4th octets. Sorry but we’re going to have to revoke your Network Engineering credentials.
thanks, fixed
Not to nitpick, but an IPv6 address is represented as eight groups of four hexadecimal digits separated by :. Like 2001:0db8:3333:4444:5555:6666:7777:8888.
Omg, that’s twice now I’ve messed it up. Fixed.
I’ll leave the regex to validate an ipv6 address as an exercise to the reader.
127.0.0.1, I’m an introvert
one of them has a 7 I’m pretty sure
wow don’t doxx me plz
0.0.0.0/0
/32
That’s only 1 ip (single host)
My PC is now Bob, My router’s Billy…
1 and 0. Some assembly required.
32 or 128 of them, depending on protocol.