of real addresses behind it,
no translation or port forwarding.
And teredo (in form of miredo daemon) offers ability to access IPv6
from anywhere (like public hotspots) w/o setting up any tunneling.
Of course, it's not much use for public server, but certainly useful
for ssh (among
.
Not quite what I've meant, but just to illustrate a point...
emerge miredo (I think it's ebuild is still in bugzilla)
/etc/init.d/miredo start
And there you go, now you can access this machine by IPv6 address on
teredo interface.
Thanks for the info. I've looked it up on Wikipedia for the details
on IPv6. One can set up a tunnel, if
ISP doesn't provide it yet.
After that, it's as simple as enabling forwarding in kernel and opening
a FORWARD chain, and you can have 64+ bits of real addresses behind it,
no translation or port forwarding.
And teredo (in form of miredo daemon) offers ability
.
There is plenty of address space on IPv6. One can set up a tunnel, if
ISP doesn't provide it yet.
After that, it's as simple as enabling forwarding in kernel and opening
a FORWARD chain, and you can have 64+ bits of real addresses behind it,
no translation or port forwarding.
And teredo (in form of miredo
the connection to the 6RD, so on my client
machines there's no special setup needed, it just magically works
without any problems.
If your router doesn't support it, you can still establish IPv6 tunnel
from your Gentoo box directly, there are several ways to do it.
Something like net-misc/miredo
establish IPv6 tunnel
from your Gentoo box directly, there are several ways to do it.
Something like net-misc/miredo is extremely simple to set up if you
just want to try it, and to see the dancing turtle on www.kame.net :)
Now what was I thinking. Oh, wait. I wasn't thinking
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