03:06:31 Is there any interest in creating a temporary/new testnet that can be spammed to stress test the software without disrupting the actual testnet (a spamnet)? 03:06:32 I would be willing to run a node for that purpose, and I have hardware that should handle it. I see old guides for creating a private testnet that use --add-exclusive-node but that is obviously limited, and I do not know if there is an easy way to set it up so it will function as a public spamnet that anyone can connect to. 03:06:33 (Quick note that I am not the person spamming stagenet. I know that is not what the stagenet is for.) 05:23:48 /join #no-wallet-left-behind 05:23:55 oh hello 21:36:26 why is ipv6 disabled by default on monerod 21:45:14 b/c all the core devs had Suddenlink as their ISP and the technicians got mad when you asked why IPv6 still wasn't available yet 22:08:12 <3​21bob321:monero.social> Turn it on yourself 22:33:28 fork it 22:33:45 make monero knots 22:36:39 there is discussion for turning on ipv6 by default, but it makes it easier to attack nodes https://github.com/monero-project/monero/pull/9285 22:38:47 ravfx: monero-gui auto updater checks periodically (multiple times per day), if it doesn't show then it means the user disabled checking for updates, or there was an issue with the DNS query 23:27:36 ipv4 is a pain in the butt to port forward 23:27:59 but i guess you guys use UPnP and stuff to port forward 23:29:04 ipv4 is a bad sybil resistance mechanism methinks 23:43:45 As someone mentions in that thread you can pretty much treat /48 blocks (or bigger) like ipv4 addresses as a bandaid solution 23:44:21 my perspective is that ipv6 has less NAT so naturally it is better for p2p, but also tor and i2p solves this anyways 23:56:56 just for perspective, i2pd also has ipv6 off by default... not sure of the reason there, but i get higher tunnel creation success rate and better subjective browsing experience with ipv6 enabled