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Sixxs

SixXS was an IPv6 tunnel broker service and prefix registry operated by a volunteer group, including Jeroen Massar, to assist early adopters in deploying IPv6. The project provided a practical path to reach the IPv6 Internet before widespread native deployment through a tunnel-based approach.

The core idea of SixXS was to deliver IPv6 connectivity over existing IPv4 networks using 6in4 tunnels.

SixXS played a significant role in the IPv6 ecosystem during the 2000s and early 2010s. It was

The SixXS project winded down as native IPv6 adoption and carrier support expanded. The service announced its

Users
would
register
on
the
SixXS
portal,
request
an
IPv6
prefix
(commonly
a
/48)
for
their
site,
and
configure
a
tunnel
endpoint
on
a
router
or
gateway.
Once
the
tunnel
was
established,
the
user
could
use
IPv6
addresses
within
their
assigned
prefix
and
reach
or
be
reached
via
the
IPv6
Internet.
The
service
included
a
web-based
management
interface
and
a
catalog
of
delegated
prefixes,
with
the
community
maintaining
documentation
and
support.
widely
used
by
academic
institutions,
ISPs,
network
operators,
and
enthusiasts
to
experiment
with
and
learn
about
IPv6
deployment,
routing,
and
address
planning.
The
service
helped
demonstrate
the
feasibility
of
IPv6
adoption
and
contributed
to
best
practices
for
prefix
allocation
and
tunnel
operation.
retirement
and
gradually
halted
new
deployments,
with
the
site
and
materials
later
archived.
Its
legacy
lies
in
the
early
practical
experience
it
provided
with
IPv6
deployment,
prefix
management,
and
the
tunnel-broker
model
that
informed
later
approaches
to
IPv6
rollout.