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Posted to commits@geode.apache.org by ud...@apache.org on 2017/08/23 20:55:15 UTC

[11/25] geode git commit: GEODE-3395 Variable-ize product version and name in user guide - Topo & Comms, format repair

GEODE-3395 Variable-ize product version and name in user guide - Topo & Comms, format repair


Project: http://git-wip-us.apache.org/repos/asf/geode/repo
Commit: http://git-wip-us.apache.org/repos/asf/geode/commit/c0f6c841
Tree: http://git-wip-us.apache.org/repos/asf/geode/tree/c0f6c841
Diff: http://git-wip-us.apache.org/repos/asf/geode/diff/c0f6c841

Branch: refs/heads/feature/GEODE-3503
Commit: c0f6c841862c64a0b82594045320e82f558452ba
Parents: 35d3a97
Author: Dave Barnes <db...@pivotal.io>
Authored: Tue Aug 22 14:30:19 2017 -0700
Committer: Dave Barnes <db...@pivotal.io>
Committed: Tue Aug 22 14:30:19 2017 -0700

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 .../topology_concepts/IPv4_and_IPv6.html.md.erb                    | 2 +-
 1 file changed, 1 insertion(+), 1 deletion(-)
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http://git-wip-us.apache.org/repos/asf/geode/blob/c0f6c841/geode-docs/topologies_and_comm/topology_concepts/IPv4_and_IPv6.html.md.erb
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diff --git a/geode-docs/topologies_and_comm/topology_concepts/IPv4_and_IPv6.html.md.erb b/geode-docs/topologies_and_comm/topology_concepts/IPv4_and_IPv6.html.md.erb
index 7fdc77f..f1a91ee 100644
--- a/geode-docs/topologies_and_comm/topology_concepts/IPv4_and_IPv6.html.md.erb
+++ b/geode-docs/topologies_and_comm/topology_concepts/IPv4_and_IPv6.html.md.erb
@@ -21,8 +21,8 @@ limitations under the License.
 
 By default, <%=vars.product_name_long%> uses Internet Protocol version 4 for <%=vars.product_name%> address specifications. You can switch to Internet Protocol version 6 if all your machines support it. You may lose performance, so you need to understand the costs of making the switch.
 
-<a id="IPv4_and_IPv6__section_027647C0034042C087FD5C8DBCB8482B"></a>
 -   IPv4 uses a 32-bit address. IPv4 was the first protocol and is still the main one in use, but its address space is expected to be exhausted within a few years.
+
 -   IPv6 uses a 128-bit address. IPv6 succeeds IPv4, and will provide a much greater number of addresses.
 
 Based on current testing with <%=vars.product_name%> , IPv4 is generally recommended. IPv6 connections tend to take longer to form and the communication tends to be slower. Not all machines support IPv6 addressing. To use IPv6, all machines in your distributed system must support it or you will have connectivity problems.