Have you tried disabling keychain sync to iCloud on the kids iPhones? WiFi
passwords are stored in there and if you sync keychain across devices then
that is why the kids iPhones are picking up your WiFi passwords.
They will also be getting all your saved userids and passwords... Do you
really wa
too
> young to be set free with their own Apple IDs, which is also part of the
> reason why they are on a separate vlan. With the phone tied to the parent
> account it is much easier to monitor their activity, not as easy with a
> separate Apple ID.
>
> Jeff
>
>
> On 10/
To reinforce Lonnie's point. One reason that ULAs and NPTv6 is so useful
is that it makes for easier internet failover. I have a Comcast/Xfinity
main connection and a T-Mobile 5G backup/failover. If I failover from
Comcast to T-Mobile then the GUA prefix assigned to me by Comcast is not
going to
Can anyone tell me what the expected behavior is when DHCPv6 is enabled on
an interface with both a GUA and ULA prefix assigned? In my dnsmasq.conf
file I have this configuration...
dhcp-range=lan,::1000,::,constructor:br0,ra-names,slaac,24h
dhcp-option=lan,option6:dns-server,[fe80::]
dhcp-op
Maddes,
This looks very similar to a question I asked a few days ago...
http://lists.thekelleys.org.uk/pipermail/dnsmasq-discuss/2017q3/011677.html
dnsmasq DHCPv6 server only seems to be issuing leases on the ULA prefix and
not on the GUA prefix when both types of addresses are configured on an
On AstLinux (www.astlinux-project.org) we use wide-dhcpv6 as our client to
obtain IPv6 from the ISP. In the conf file for that we specify a
script "/etc/dhcp6c.script" that is called whenever the ISP updates IPv6
and we can act on any changes to the delegated prefixes. Our script file
is here...