Hello,
On 10 July 2014 13:27, Harald Dunkel harald.dun...@aixigo.de wrote:
Maybe I'm misunderstanding something, but why do you add this line to
your interfaces file if you don't have a DHCPv6 server?
Come on, does this really matter?
It does indeed.
Point is that the Debian host got stuck
Andrew Shadura wrote:
Maybe I'm misunderstanding something, but why do you add this line to
your interfaces file if you don't have a DHCPv6 server?
Come on, does this really matter?
Point is that the Debian host got stuck at boot time
without any way out. This is fatal.
Regards
Harri
--
On 07/10/14 13:35, Andrew Shadura wrote:
Hello,
On 10 July 2014 13:27, Harald Dunkel harald.dun...@aixigo.de wrote:
Maybe I'm misunderstanding something, but why do you add this line to
your interfaces file if you don't have a DHCPv6 server?
Come on, does this really matter?
It does
Hello,
On 10 July 2014 15:27, Harald Dunkel harald.dun...@aixigo.de wrote:
Come on, does this really matter?
It does indeed.
Sorry to say, but it doesn't. The current configuration of
other hosts or services in a network is sometimes unpredictable.
Esp. for IPv6 in a foreign LAN there is a
Package: ifupdown
Version: 0.7.48.1
If I set /etc/network/interfaces to
## The loopback network interface
auto lo
iface lo inet loopback
## The primary network interface (eth0)
auto eth0
iface eth0 inet6 dhcp
without having a DHCP6 server in my
Hi,
On 25 June 2014 16:07, Harald Dunkel harald.dun...@aixigo.de wrote:
If I set /etc/network/interfaces to
## The primary network interface (eth0)
auto eth0
iface eth0 inet6 dhcp
without having a DHCP6 server in my LAN, then the next boot
gets stuck (even for
Andrew Shadura wrote:
Harald Dunkel wrote:
auto eth0
iface eth0 inet6 dhcp
Maybe I'm misunderstanding something, but why do you add this line to
your interfaces file if you don't have a DHCPv6 server?
Perhaps it is a mobile (or semi-mobile) device? That has always been
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