What is expected behaviour of pfSense if ISP edge router does not send periodic RA?
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In some cases, my ISP edge router does not send periodic RA messages. (They understand this is a problem and they are trying to get the vendor to fix it.) The router does send an initial RA message in response to the RS when when PD happens. What will pfSense do in this situation? Is it expected that IPv6 will stop working? I'm asking, because the observed behaviour is that IPv6 does stop working some time (e.g., a couple of hours) after PD and I'm wondering if this is the cause.
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It will fail. RAs have a lifetime. If it expires, without receiving another RA, then the computer no longer has a prefix for the network.
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@jknott Thanks for the reply. Does anyone know what the exact mechanism is. Does the route get removed? Presumably there is a timer. How long is it? As I said, I'm trying to understand what's happening, so I can inform the ISP.
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When a computer loses the prefix, it no longer has a valid address and I would also expect the route to be deleted. You can examine the lifetime with Packet Capture or Wireshark. I just looked and my RAs show a lifetime of 60s from pfSense, so after a minute without another RA, it would fail. You can examine the lifetime in RAs from your ISP to see what it should be and whether you're exceeding it.
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@jknott The ISP edge routers normally output RA between 15 and 30 minute intervals. IRRC, the lifetime is consistent with that. Some of the edge routers are not outputting RA messages which as I said is a known problem. The only RA they output is in reply to the RS when PD happens. Sometimes ipv6 stops working after a couple of hours. After restarting the WAN (save / apply), it sometimes stays working indefinitely and only seems to be flakey if pfsense is rebooted or for example, when it was upgraded to 2.4.4_2. It's not deterministic, which is why I'm wondering what the intended behaviour is supposed to be and if this is the cause of ipv6 not staying up or if it's something else.
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That doesn't sound normal. I see RAs regularly on my network.
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@jknott said in What is expected behaviour of pfSense if ISP edge router does not send periodic RA?:
That doesn't sound normal. I see RAs regularly on my network.
Sigh. Of course it's not normal. The ISP knows there is a problem, as I already stated.
I posted here to determine what the expected behaviour of pfsense should be if edge router does not send unsolicited RA messages. As I said, an RA message is only being sent in response to the RS at the time of PD, but not unsolicited, but for some reason, the behaviour of pfsense is not consistent. It seems to lose ipv6 connectivity a couple of hours after a reboot or upgrade, but if the WAN interface is restarted (save/apply), it seems to keep working longer. This doesn't make sense. If pfsense requires unsolicited RA messages within the expiration time and they are not received, specifically what is it supposed to do? Why does it seem to only lose ipv6 connectivity a couple of hours later, but if the WAN is restarted, it works longer? If it's designed to delete the route (for example), that does not appear to be happening consistently. Maybe there is something else wrong.
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Easiest thing to do is probably pcap the RS/RA traffic and look at what is actually being sent.
Cox sends an RA every 4 seconds. I never have any issues. Not sure what this 15-30 minute stuff is all about.
The ones I receive are:
Router lifetime (s): 1800
Reachable time (ms): 3600000
Retrans timer (ms): 0Router Lifetime 16-bit unsigned integer. The lifetime associated with the default router in units of seconds. The field can contain values up to 65535 and receivers should handle any value, while the sending rules in Section 6 limit the lifetime to 9000 seconds. A Lifetime of 0 indicates that the router is not a default router and SHOULD NOT appear on the default router list. The Router Lifetime applies only to the router's usefulness as a default router; it does not apply to information contained in other message fields or options. Options that need time limits for their information include their own lifetime fields. Reachable Time 32-bit unsigned integer. The time, in milliseconds, that a node assumes a neighbor is reachable after having received a reachability confirmation. Used by the Neighbor Unreachability Detection algorithm (see Section 7.3). A value of zero means unspecified (by this router). Retrans Timer 32-bit unsigned integer. The time, in milliseconds, between retransmitted Neighbor Solicitation messages. Used by address resolution and the Neighbor Unreachability Detection algorithm (see Sections 7.2 and 7.3). A value of zero means unspecified (by this router).
My initial assumption would be that pfSense (FreeBSD) would obey the RFC (RFC 4861). Only way to know is to pcap whatever the ISP is actually sending and take a look.
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@derelict Thanks for your reply. This ISP has made some of possibly questionable implementation decisions in their network.
First, the DHCP before RA feature was tested on this network. Their edge routers will not respond to an RS until after the DHCP solicit/advertise and DHCP request/reply sequence is complete. After that, the edge router will respond to an RS with an RA. I just fired up wireshark and captured some packets. The router lifetime in the is 4500 seconds (75 minutes), the reachable time is 0 and the and the retrans timer is 100 ms. These values are also used in the unsolicited RA messages, which leads to another interesting implementation decision.
Second, the time between the unsolicited RA messages ranges from approximately 15 minutes to approximately 30 minutes. I determined this by capturing RA messages over several hours. This is longer than usual, but according to RFC 2461, MaxRtrAdvInterval is 1800 seconds, so they are operating within the allowable limit.
I also looked at the DHCP reply. T1 and T2 in the IA for PD are 300 and 480. The preferred lifetime and valid lifetime in the IA Prefix are 600 and 900, respectively.
The above are from my router which is working properly.
Apparently on some fiber networks, the unsolicited RA messages are not being sent at all. This is a known problem that they are working with the router vendor on. I'm trying to help someone else figure out why pfsense is behaving as I described above. Based on these timers, I would think it should work for 75 minutes (or whatever the prefix lifetime is) until the prefix expires, then it should stop working. However, it seems to fail once after initially getting a prefix, then if the interface is restarted, it keeps working. I don't understand why it would keep working if prefix expiration is causing it to stop working after the interface is started. Maybe something else is going on. I don't have packets captured from this network, but I'll try to get some.