will do
muchas gracias
On 8/11/2018 23:13, JORDI PALET MARTINEZ wrote:
> By the way, Black Mesa Wireless, I believe is still using (at least in the
> blog), DNS64.
>
>
>
> Probably you don't want to use it.
>
>
>
> You really need to read the documents I mention before, to know more details
Hello Aberto, Jordi
many thanks for the quick and detailed answers
@Alberto - actually the resources usage was the next question, but you
answered already; it looks like I found the software which does what I
need, the rest is in the details of the implementation.
@Jordi - the whole idea is
If you're setting up the ISP, you probably choose the CPE.
If you don't find a commercial solution that supports the CLAT (because you may
be too small for asking the feature), you need to consider buying cheap CPEs of
your choice, and installing OpenWRT with the CLAT, which will solve all
By the way, Black Mesa Wireless, I believe is still using (at least in the
blog), DNS64.
Probably you don't want to use it.
You really need to read the documents I mention before, to know more details
about why you don't want to use DNS64 and how avoiding it.
Actually, you read a bit
> is the setup above feasible for networks with several thousand users
> (between 5-10k)
Performance-wise, as a developer, I don't really have a means to test
that level of traffic. Maybe somebody else in the list has that
information.
Functionality-wise though, Jool won't stop you. Just make
yes - I found this solution here -->
https://blog.brocktice.com/2017/12/27/deploying-464xlat-for-ipv6-only-clients-on-a-small-wisp-network-with-mikrotik-routers/
thank you very much for the hints
On 8/11/2018 22:42, JORDI PALET MARTINEZ wrote:
> If you're setting up the ISP, you probably
Yeah, is one of the ISPs we indicated how to do it ;-)
You can find some thread on this on the NANOG mailing list.
Regards,
Jordi
-Mensaje original-
De: en nombre de Petre Tudor
Fecha: sábado, 11 de agosto de 2018, 15:58
Para:
Asunto: Re: [Jool-list] jool setup