As Mark says, having your router send router advertisements will allow
the clients to configure automatically. It's easy to use a Windows 2003
Server (or XP machine for that matter) to do this. You'll also want to
add routes to the machine's routing table pointing the right prefix out
the right
On Thu, 8 Sep 2005, Susan Zheng wrote:
Hi,
I'm a beginner for IPv6 need to set up a small private IPv6 network.
The lab setup plan is like below:
Use 1 windows 2003 server which has two IPv6 interfaces configured as
default routers(it has two NIC cards) connected to net1 and net2.
My
hi,
all fine.
I'd like to mention, that site-local addresses _have_ allready been
deprecated in September 2004 (RFC 3879) so they are not part of the
ipv6-standard anymore.
ULI would be an solution in future, maybe 6to4-address space would be
an idea today.
Regards,
//Ronald
Mark Smith
Title: Re: how to add default gateway on Linux host
Hi,
Private address space doesnt exist in IPv6 (at least not like the private address space in IPv4). The idea is precisely that we dont need that, otherwise we will create IPv6 NAT, which will work all the work done for moving to IPv6.
I
Hi,
I'm modifying an existing perl script that serves as an DHCP Client/Server
script so that it uses IPv6 instead of IPv4.
That script uses rawip to make ip packets and send them over the network. Is
there an IPv6 alternative to RawIP or is it possible to make IPv6 packets with
RawIP. And if so,
Thank you for your info!
My current IPv6 set up situation is like described as below:
The two linux hosts can ping their default gateway's site-local addresses,
i.e. each site-local address connectto the other net.
For example:
---
host1 from net1 can ping the other net's -- net2