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by bratch 1708 days ago
It looks like only IPv4 is affected. IPv6 is working fine to a couple of test endpoints.

   3  2a02:c28:1:6506::106  2.131 ms  2.124 ms  2.117 ms
   4  2a02:c28:11:6::100  15.695 ms  15.689 ms  15.682 ms
   5  2a02:c28:1:1900::19  15.998 ms  15.991 ms  15.985 ms
   6  2a02:c28:0:1819::18  15.259 ms  15.051 ms  16.975 ms
   7  2a02:c28:0:1718::17  16.968 ms  16.403 ms  15.619 ms
   8  2a02:c28:0:1731::31  15.406 ms  18.620 ms  18.554 ms
   9  2001:7f8:4::3f94:2  12.025 ms * *
  10  * * *
  11  2001:41d0:aaaa:100::5  21.622 ms  38.813 ms 2001:41d0:aaaa:100::3  37.231 ms
  12  * * *
  13  * 2001:41d0::25f1  19.507 ms 2001:41d0::c68  20.892 ms
  14  2001:41d0::513  19.685 ms  19.674 ms 2001:41d0::50d  18.248 ms
  15  2001:41d0:0:50::5:10a1  19.092 ms  19.917 ms 2001:41d0:0:50::5:10a5  20.126 ms
  16  2001:41d0:0:50::1:143f  19.375 ms 2001:41d0:0:50::1:143b  24.609 ms 2001:41d0:0:50::1:143d  18.933 ms
1 comments

Ugh. You reminded me that while OVH used to hand out a /128, if you needed more address space you had to pay more for “enterprise” IPv6 or something.
Is their enterprise prefix /64? That would be even funnier. :)
lolwut ?

Don't consumer ISPs hand out /64s or /48s ?

Yeah, Comcast hands out /64s on residential connections. /128 is literally just a single address, which is absurd if true.
Unfortunately, it was(is?) true. Not just OVH though, even Scaleway also had these silly /128 shenanigans.
they give a /64 to all dedicated servers