On Wed, Jul 25, 2001 at 08:07:42PM -0700, Jeremy T. Bouse wrote: > .___________. .___________. .__________. > | Host 1 | | Gateway 1 | | HE.net | > | v4: x.173 |--- eth0 ---| v4: x.170 |--- tun0 ---| v4: y.26 | > | v6: p:EUI | | v6: p:EUI | | v6: stat | > `-----------' `-----------' `----------' > > In this map x is my IPv4 /28 network and p is my IPv6 Global > prefix from HE.net /64... This is how they talk over the ethernet LAN > and has no problem communicating... All IPv6 addresses are EUI-64... > > In the tunnel configuration the IPv6 addresses are static... > My side is ::1671 and theirs is ::1670 under the same prefix using > a /127 subneting.. Gateway 1 and HE.net have no problems talking...
Can something, anything, ping your IPv6 address of the eth0 port on gateway1? It might be that he.net does not have a route to your /28 network. When you ping from your gateway, you are using the ::1671 address. Also does your other machine have a route out to the rest of the network? I find tcpdump VERY handy in this situation. - Craig -- Craig Small VK2XLZ GnuPG:1C1B D893 1418 2AF4 45EE 95CB C76C E5AC 12CA DFA5 Eye-Net Consulting http://www.eye-net.com.au/ <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> MIEEE <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Debian developer <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

