Can't get Dual Stack *quite* running
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Well I got the issue sorted of my LAN receiving IPV6 Addresses, my WAN connection got its /64 allocation from the ISP
I have the gateway up, but for some strange reason, when I go to http://test-ipv6.com , it still tells me that ipv6 is not enabled
I've created the rules as well to allow ipv6 traffic out, but for some strange reason I cant get it to work
Anyone got any ideas please for what I am missing?
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Well, there is a lot of missing info. Like, are you routing from one range to another?
What happens when you trace route to 2001:4860:4860::8888 from the firewall and from a system behind the firewall?Details on you setup will only help here.
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Routing only from the internal /56 the ISP supplied me (2001:44b8:22b:b100)
I've got it successfully showing up as assigning addresses out via DHCP
Here's what happens when I try to tracert the afore mentioned address
Tracing route to google-public-dns-a.google.com [2001:4860:4860::8888]
over a maximum of 30 hops:1 Destination host unreachable.
Trace complete.
I have the Firewall rules set to allow traffic, LAN auto added them when I did a factory reset
I also added one via WAN to allow, should I set it to allow all ipv6 data from lan?
Let me know what other info you need
EDIT: Attached shows that the necessary ipv6 addresses are there
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What is intresting is that fe80 addresses are not internet routable.
from http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Link-local_address :
Link-local addresses for IPv4 are defined in the address block 169.254.0.0/16. In IPv6, they are assigned with the fe80::/64 prefix.
If they are routing that block to you, it is not going to be on that gateway. Perhaps they are expecting you to route on another IP? I would think that the gateway is somehow wrong since any router will not pass a link local address.
Your WAN is assigned an address from dhcp, so you are probably going to have to talk to your ISP. All the ones I have dealt with so far all use static IP and not from a dhcp, so I might be wrong.
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Your gateway can be a link local address. There is no harm in specifiying the gateway as a link local or global address since it is the same host.
It makes perfect sense for gateways since these are normally always directly connected.
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Your gateway can be a link local address. There is no harm in specifiying the gateway as a link local or global address since it is the same host.
It makes perfect sense for gateways since these are normally always directly connected.
thanks for the clarification.
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Turns out there is a device or two on the network here that wont work with ipv6, so I've had to turn off the ipv6 stuff for now :(
Mainly the FetchTV box and the printer, the moment both IPV4 & IPV6 are being advertised, those 2 devices stop working
All good, without ipv6 running now, the network is running rather nicely
Im rather liking the uptime :D