diff options
author | Xiao Pan <xyz@flylightning.xyz> | 2025-07-14 18:33:28 +0800 |
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committer | Xiao Pan <xyz@flylightning.xyz> | 2025-07-14 18:33:28 +0800 |
commit | b28ea4c277c51a2837ab7bd91bb4f9c7b10c90dd (patch) | |
tree | f4e9e1c7959b6c9ee407f064fc6cf786639ce932 | |
parent | df0b83f0cfe10fb515e5d69b9f8f48308b52368b (diff) |
no need gai.conf because I no longer prefer ipv4
-rw-r--r-- | etc/gai.conf | 65 |
1 files changed, 0 insertions, 65 deletions
diff --git a/etc/gai.conf b/etc/gai.conf deleted file mode 100644 index 4616ed00..00000000 --- a/etc/gai.conf +++ /dev/null @@ -1,65 +0,0 @@ -# Configuration for getaddrinfo(3). -# -# So far only configuration for the destination address sorting is needed. -# RFC 3484 governs the sorting. But the RFC also says that system -# administrators should be able to overwrite the defaults. This can be -# achieved here. -# -# All lines have an initial identifier specifying the option followed by -# up to two values. Information specified in this file replaces the -# default information. Complete absence of data of one kind causes the -# appropriate default information to be used. The supported commands include: -# -# reload <yes|no> -# If set to yes, each getaddrinfo(3) call will check whether this file -# changed and if necessary reload. This option should not really be -# used. There are possible runtime problems. The default is no. -# -# label <mask> <value> -# Add another rule to the RFC 3484 label table. See section 2.1 in -# RFC 3484. The default is: -# -#label ::1/128 0 -#label ::/0 1 -#label 2002::/16 2 -#label ::/96 3 -#label ::ffff:0:0/96 4 -#label fec0::/10 5 -#label fc00::/7 6 -#label 2001:0::/32 7 -# -# This default differs from the tables given in RFC 3484 by handling -# (now obsolete) site-local IPv6 addresses and Unique Local Addresses. -# The reason for this difference is that these addresses are never -# NATed while IPv4 site-local addresses most probably are. Given -# the precedence of IPv6 over IPv4 (see below) on machines having only -# site-local IPv4 and IPv6 addresses a lookup for a global address would -# see the IPv6 be preferred. The result is a long delay because the -# site-local IPv6 addresses cannot be used while the IPv4 address is -# (at least for the foreseeable future) NATed. We also treat Teredo -# tunnels special. -# -# precedence <mask> <value> -# Add another rule to the RFC 3484 precedence table. See section 2.1 -# and 10.3 in RFC 3484. The default is: -# -#precedence ::1/128 50 -#precedence ::/0 40 -#precedence 2002::/16 30 -#precedence ::/96 20 -#precedence ::ffff:0:0/96 10 -# -# For sites which prefer IPv4 connections change the last line to -# -#precedence ::ffff:0:0/96 100 - -# -# scopev4 <mask> <value> -# Add another rule to the RFC 6724 scope table for IPv4 addresses. -# By default the scope IDs described in section 3.2 in RFC 6724 are -# used. Changing these defaults should hardly ever be necessary. -# The defaults are equivalent to: -# -#scopev4 ::ffff:169.254.0.0/112 2 -#scopev4 ::ffff:127.0.0.0/104 2 -#scopev4 ::ffff:0.0.0.0/96 14 |