(sorry for replying to you) hi
On Tue, Sep 03, 2002 at 10:31:30AM -0400, Anthony DeRobertis wrote: > First thing to try: ethereal, tcpdump, whatever you like. Look at > what's actually happening on layer 2. Are packets being sent? To the > right MAC address? oh, i tried this. i get the following: --($:~)-- tcpdump -i xl0 -n proto ipv6-icmp tcpdump: listening on xl0 17:36:55.462827 3ffe:2029:8400:0:1::2 > ff02::1:ff00:1: icmp6: neighbor sol: who has 3ffe:2029:8400:0:1::1 17:36:56.462734 3ffe:2029:8400:0:1::2 > ff02::1:ff00:1: icmp6: neighbor sol: who has 3ffe:2029:8400:0:1::1 so the neighbor request goes out. but no answer. (this is a dump on the openbsd box, dumping a ping from linux2219-usagi) it works fine between the linux2219-usagi and the linux2219. so.. is the neighbor sol request malformed? does openbsd thin it does not have to answer it (whyever) ? > If no packets are being sent, then it is a Linux problem. > If packets are being sent to the right MAC, but no echo-replies are > being sent, then it is an OpenBSD problem. > And so on. > Second, make sure there is no firewall on the OpenBSD box. there is. but i do allow all ipv6 traffic, from everywhere to everwhere. (i disabled the firewall totally for these tests) > Third question, why aren't you using stateless autoconf? ;-) hehe... oh well, i would like to provide services to the world, so the ips must be static for the dns services. greetz & thank you for your help Flavio Curti -- http://no-way.org/~fcu/

