Apparently, my home ISP (Kabel Deutschland) is rolling out IPv6 in my segment (in fact, they are doing DS-Lite to those new customers with a non-Cisco cable modem) so I can use 6to4 with pfSense 2.1-BETA1:
[2.1-BETA1][[email protected]]/root(5): ping6 ipv6.google.com PING6(56=40+8+8 bytes) 2002:b21a:13da:: --> 2a00:1450:4016:801::1013 16 bytes from 2a00:1450:4016:801::1013, icmp_seq=0 hlim=57 time=34.069 ms 16 bytes from 2a00:1450:4016:801::1013, icmp_seq=1 hlim=57 time=31.432 ms 16 bytes from 2a00:1450:4016:801::1013, icmp_seq=2 hlim=57 time=43.706 ms 16 bytes from 2a00:1450:4016:801::1013, icmp_seq=3 hlim=57 time=32.256 ms 16 bytes from 2a00:1450:4016:801::1013, icmp_seq=4 hlim=57 time=31.344 ms 16 bytes from 2a00:1450:4016:801::1013, icmp_seq=5 hlim=57 time=32.164 ms 16 bytes from 2a00:1450:4016:801::1013, icmp_seq=6 hlim=57 time=39.633 ms 16 bytes from 2a00:1450:4016:801::1013, icmp_seq=7 hlim=57 time=44.467 ms However, I have no clue how to allocate my LAN systems an IPv6 address. Do I have to allocate static IPv6 for the pfSense LAN and each system on the network from 2002:b21a:13da:: ? I've put "Track Interface" as IPv6 Configuration Type of LAN, and Track IPv6 Interface as WAN (with no Prefix ID) and now it just seems to work (TM). I can ping ipv6.google.com from Windows 7, but I don't see the dancing kame. Am I on that new-fangled IPng thang already? Or why doesn't IPv6 have precedence? I thought Windows 7 by default would prefer IPv6 for dual-stacked hosts. _______________________________________________ List mailing list [email protected] http://lists.pfsense.org/mailman/listinfo/list
