Análises de IPvFoo
IPvFoo por Paul Marks
37 análises
- Avaliado em 5 de 5por Usuário 13875254 do Firefox, há 6 anos
 - Avaliado em 5 de 5por Usuário 13892351 do Firefox, há 7 anos
 - Avaliado em 5 de 5por Usuário 13737133 do Firefox, há 8 anosThanks ! This is exactly what I was looking for !
 - Avaliado em 5 de 5por Levitation Edge, há 8 anosI cannot overstate how happy we are to have found this extremely useful utility. Thank you for building this!
 - Avaliado em 5 de 5por Usuário 13224295 do Firefox, há 8 anosFor those wanting to see to which IPv4/IPv6 addresses the website is connections this is a great add-on.
 - Avaliado em 5 de 5por Usuário 13029084 do Firefox, há 8 anosBeing very interested in the IPv6 adoption, I like to see if a page is really using IPv6, IPv4, or a mixture.
This extension shows if IPv4 or IPv6 is used just by looking at the extension icon: the big number is for the server on the address bar, the small number(s) showing if components of the page were served by IPv4 and/or IPv6 servers. (Some IPv6 pages are driven by components on IPv4-only servers. For example, my credit union has a dual-stack main page, but all its online banking is IPv4-only.)
Click on the IPvFoo icon, and every server is listed, and whether it is secured, whether it's cached, and (usually) the IP address. It's all presented in a very nice table.
The only shortcoming I have seen so far is if some components are cached from activity on another tab so a server isn't accessed by the current tab, the IP address of that server wont' show; but a "refresh ignoring the cache" (Ctrl+F5) fixes that, at least for the current page. (I hope a future version would resolve the IP address in this situation, but I think it's 5-star-worthy even as it is today.)
Overall, I am very glad to see IPvFoo here for Firefox 57+. I first came across it when I was using Chrome and in Chrome I have absolutely no reservations in recommending IPvFoo!Resposta do desenvolvedor
publicado há 2 anosI finally fixed the caching problem in v2.11, by keeping recent IP addresses in RAM. This fills in the gaps when Firefox reports a request without an IP address.