<p>On Mar 15, 2012 2:48 AM, "Nicolas Riendeau" <<a href="mailto:knight@teksavvy.com">knight@teksavvy.com</a>> wrote:<br>
> OK, I was able to "talk" to the dev who worked on this.<br>
><br>
> UPnP (for example) is an IPV4 only protocol so if you want UPnP (and a<br>
> few other things) to work you must still provide an IPV4 address. If you<br>
> don't care about UPnP (and the other things that are IPv4 specific) you<br>
> don't need to provide an IPv4 address...<br></p>
<p>I only now noticed there is nearby another similar string for ipv6. The ipv4 should possibly say IPv4 in it also, as the ipv6 is more precise.</p>
<p>"Enter the IP address of this machine. Use an externally accessible address (ie, not 127.0.0.1) if you are going to be running a frontend on a different machine than this one. Note, in IPv6 setups, this is still required for certain extras such as UPnP."</p>
<p>vs.</p>
<p>"Enter the IPv6 address of this machine. Use an externally accessible address (ie, not ::1) if you are going to be running a frontend on a different machine than this one."</p>
<p>Also it could perhaps rather say something like: "..., in mixed IPv4 and IPv6 setups, this is still required for certain IPv4 only extras like UPnP.</p>
<p>Thanks anyway, you cleared it out for me.</p>