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    Static IPv6 setup

    Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved IPv6
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    • M
      msf2000
      last edited by

      It's probably the routing. Are you using a IPv6 tunnel broker, or is your IPv6 natively provided by the same ISP as IPv4?

      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
      • M
        msf2000
        last edited by msf2000

        If you're using a tunnel broker, then let your LAN clients to use a different subnet (/64).
        2001:xxxx:xxxx:1000::1 -- isp side of ipv6 tunnel
        2001:xxxx:xxxx:1000::2 -- firewall side of ipv6 tunnel
        2001:xxxx:xxxx:2000::1 -- firewall lan interface
        2001:xxxx:xxxx:2000::/64 -- lan dhcp range anywhere in here is fine.

        Then, configure the IPv6 router as "Managed" mode.
        http://firewall/services_router_advertisements.php

        R 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
        • R
          rhyde @msf2000
          last edited by

          @msf2000

          I am receiving a static /56 IPv6 block from CenturyLink Business.

          Upstream Gateway:
          2001:XXXX:XXXX:900::1

          WAN Interface:
          2001:XXXX:XXXX:900::2 /64

          LAN Interface:
          2001:XXXX:XXXX:901::1 /64

          PINGS:

          YES | LAN > WAN
          YES | WAN > Gateway
          YES | WAN > GOOGLE DNS

          NO | LAN > Gateway
          NO | WAN > LAN

          ISP PINGS:
          NO | Gateway > WAN

          Firewall rules are correct. I have RA turned on in "Assisted" Mode.

          From what I read:
          The Upstream Gateway needs to have a route for the /56 pointing to the Pfsense WAN interface

          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
          • M
            msf2000
            last edited by

            On the page /system_gateways.php
            Is there an entry for 2001:XXXX:XXXX:900::1 using interface WAN?

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            • R
              rhyde
              last edited by

              Yes there is and it is also the default gateway.

              1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
              • M
                msf2000
                last edited by msf2000

                Try one or both of these:

                1. Traceroute from a LAN client to 2001:XXXX:XXXX:900::1
                2. Goto the top menu Diagnostics --> Routes.
                  Screenshot just the section "IPv6 Routes".

                You should see:
                Destination -- Gateway
                default -- 2001:XXXX:XXXX:900::1
                2001:XXXX:XXXX:900::1 -- link##
                2001:XXXX:XXXX:900::2 -- link##
                2001:XXXX:XXXX:901::1 -- link##
                2001:XXXX:XXXX:901::/64 -- link##

                ignore the fe80:: stuff

                Keep in mind that /64 would make the WAN & LAN subnets separated properly, but a /56 would not.

                2001🔡abcd:900::1/56 is
                Start Range: 2001🔡abcd:900:0:0:0:0
                End Range: 2001🔡abcd:9ff:ffff:ffff:ffff:ffff

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                • L
                  lam16
                  last edited by

                  am having same problem

                  i have BT statis ip address
                  network address: 2a00:2323:ffaa::/64
                  gateway 2a00:2323:ffaa::1

                  WAN
                  ip: 2a00:2323:ffaa::5/64

                  LAN
                  ip: 2a00:2323:ffaa:1000::/56

                  ping
                  WAN to GW - OK
                  WAN to google - OK

                  LAN to WAN - OK
                  LAN to GW - FAIL
                  LAN to google - FAIL

                  system > advanced > networking > ipv6 enabled
                  FIREWAL > WAN ipv6 *** pass
                  FIREWAL > LAN ipv6 *** pass

                  please can you help? what am i missing?

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                  • M
                    msf2000
                    last edited by

                    For everyone having routing problems with IPv6, be sure you setup the router under:
                    http://firewall/services_router_advertisements.php?if=lan

                    Router Mode should be "Managed"
                    Managed - Will advertise this router with all configuration through a DHCPv6 server.

                    That's the only way I've gotten it to work correctly.

                    N 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                    • N
                      Napsterbater @msf2000
                      last edited by

                      @msf2000

                      "Managed" is not the only "correct" setting. It is only needed/used IF you want to disable SLAAC and tell the client to ONLY use DHCPv6, of which you need to also have DHCPv6 correctly configured on that interface.

                      In fact most deployments especially in residential will/should use unmanaged (DNS provided via RDNSS only), or stateless DHCP, this allows SLAAC addressing and RDNSS (provides DNS servers for devices supporting RDNSS) AND allows devices that only support DNS via Stateless DHCP to get DNS servers and such from DHCPv6 (Older Windows versions, including early Win10)

                      In fact a setting of Managed will not allow some/many device to get an IPv6 address at all as not all support DHCPv6, Android being the biggest ones.

                      If unmanaged is not working then double check all settings on the screen, also confirm the systems are getting DNS servers even if they are only IPv4 (provided they have IPv4 connectivity)

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                      • M
                        msf2000
                        last edited by

                        @Napsterbater

                        I don't know enough about DHCPv6 to know what the correct setting in every deployment scenario. Based on the OP and others' comments, I provided the only setting that worked for me in my deployment.

                        Can you please make a suggestion to @rhyde on what settings to change?

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                        • R
                          rhyde
                          last edited by

                          This post is deleted!
                          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                          • R
                            rhyde
                            last edited by rhyde

                            Hey guys I finally had some breakthrough with this. Please note that the below config is if you want to have dual stack support.

                            Here is what ultimately worked:

                            Put the LAN and WAN in Bridge Mode
                            0_1534023215100_bridge-mode.png

                            WAN interface config:

                            0_1534022172773_wan-interface.png

                            LAN interface config:

                            0_1534022274936_lan-interface.png

                            DHCPv6 & RA config:

                            0_1534022307105_wan-dhcp.png

                            0_1534022403304_wan-ra.png

                            DHCP config:

                            0_1534022415795_lan-dchp.png

                            WAN firewall rules:

                            0_1534022576203_wan-firewall-rules.png

                            LAN firewall rules:

                            0_1534022527910_lan-firewall-rules.png

                            Let me know if you guys have any thoughts or suggestions to this config. I am open to whatever. There could be some issues with it but at least it works. :)

                            JKnottJ 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                            • JKnottJ
                              JKnott @rhyde
                              last edited by

                              @rhyde said in Static IPv6 setup:

                              Let me know if you guys have any thoughts or suggestions to this config. I am open to whatever. There could be some issues with it but at least it works. :)

                              What does the ISP say you should be using? If they're expecting you to use DHCPv6-PD and you use a static config, you may find you have problems, even if it working at the moment.

                              PfSense running on Qotom mini PC
                              i5 CPU, 4 GB memory, 32 GB SSD & 4 Intel Gb Ethernet ports.
                              UniFi AC-Lite access point

                              I haven't lost my mind. It's around here...somewhere...

                              R 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                              • R
                                rhyde @JKnott
                                last edited by

                                @jknott the ISP is giving a static IP only. This is business grade internet, not residential.

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                                • DerelictD
                                  Derelict LAYER 8 Netgate
                                  last edited by Derelict

                                  I cannot imagine that a bridge like that is necessary.

                                  That is really ugly.

                                  They should route the /56 to an address on the WAN interface. That address can be obtained in multiple different ways. It can even be link-local. It is really up to them to tell you, in general terms, how to provision your router interface. For anyone else it would just be a guessing game.

                                  This is an example of instructions for a static /48 from a popular IPv6 transit + colo provider:

                                  IPv6
                                  2001:xx:x:xx::/64
                                  ::1 is ISP
                                  ::2 is Customer
                                  
                                  They route 2001:xxx:xxx::/48 to 2001:xx:x:xx::2
                                  

                                  It's as simple as that. Interface network + routed subnet.

                                  In that case you would set pfSense WAN to Static 2001:xx:x:xx::2/64 with a gateway of 2001:xx:x:xx::1 and use 2001:xxx:xxx::/48 on the inside however you want.

                                  Chattanooga, Tennessee, USA
                                  A comprehensive network diagram is worth 10,000 words and 15 conference calls.
                                  DO NOT set a source address/port in a port forward or firewall rule unless you KNOW you need it!
                                  Do Not Chat For Help! NO_WAN_EGRESS(TM)

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