IPv6: Theory, Protocol, and Practice, Second Edition

The following are all IPv6-related RFCs that had been published by the IETF as of mid-2003. The list was generated by searches on the RFC archive at www.rfc-editor.org. RFCs are listed in descending order, and each listing includes the RFC number, title, authors, date of publication, status (that is, whether it is updated or obsoleted by some other RFC or if it updates or obsoletes some other RFC), and type of document.
INFORMATIONAL RFCs provide information and are not to be interpreted as specifying an Internet standard.
PROPOSED STANDARD RFCs specify a protocol that has been implemented and that is being considered for use as an Internet standard.
DRAFT STANDARD RFCs specify a protocol that has been implemented in at least two different forms and that has a body of experience and research backing it up. It often represents a revision of a PROPOSED STANDARD.
STANDARD RFCs (also denoted as STDs) specify a protocol that has been accepted as a standard for the Internet community.
BEST CURRENT PRACTICES documents are published as RFCs as well as BCPs and contain information about recommended procedures, processes, or techniques for accomplishing networking goals.
EXPERIMENTAL RFCs specify a protocol that is being investigated by researchers. Experimental specifications should generally not be implemented or deployed in production networks and should be used with extreme caution in laboratory conditions.
RFCs published on April 1 are almost always April Fool s jokes and should be read for amusement only (however, there have been non-joke...