Do any sample data sets exist for IPv6 traffic, e.g. Apache logs or traffic analysis logs? Alternatively does anyone have any ideas how to generate one or - optimistically - an existing tool to generate data? Ideally I would like sample addresses from real deployed ranged in proportion to how many addresses are in that range and / or expected traffic volume to / from those ranges, i.e. representative of the traffic that would go through a real-world router or web proxy or web server access log.
We're adding an IPv6 lookup to an existing project (matching subnets / address prefixes) and I was hoping to find realistic-looking IPv6 data to test / tune the implementation with. I've seen this question about lookup structures for IPv6 and skimmed the papers linked but apart from a few graphs there's little information on their test data.
I considered taking IPv4 traffic logs, reverse-DNSing all the IP(v4) addresses then perfoming an AAAA lookup on the hostnames to try and catch some IPv6 but I think the coverage would be vanishingly small - even for Google there's no IPv6 on www.google.com, you need to use ipv6.google.com instead. I could always just generate random numbers but I'd prefer to use more realistic data if possible. We don't have an IPv6-capable network of our own.
Thanks! I realise that I'm unlikely to find genuine traffic data since there's obviously privacy issues in releasing that but some sites do release IPv4 logs and I'm surprised I can't find anything.