OpenNTPD not syncing anymore with recent i386 snaphots?

2007-09-28 Thread Martin Gignac
Hi, I recently installed two OpenBSD systems from an i386 snapshot dated September 13th; one in a VMware machine and one on actual physical hardware. A couple of days later I noticed that both servers were *not* date/time synced with the NTP server in my lab, even though I run OpenNTPD on all my

Re: OpenNTPD not syncing anymore with recent i386 snaphots?

2007-09-29 Thread Martin Gignac
Hi Maurice, Can you check whether this is fixed when you add 'weight 1' to each server line in ntpd.conf? Yup, that did it. :-) There were some changes in ntpd a couple of weeks ago (new correction keyword to compensate the offset of radio clocks and some changes in the parser) and the

Is install42.iso lagging behind cd42.iso and individual packages?

2007-09-29 Thread Martin Gignac
Hi, Yesterday evening I downloaded the install42.iso, cd42.iso and all *.tgz packages from the i386 snapshots directory on the ftp.openbsd.org website. All files had a timestamp of Sept. 24. I then ran them through MD5 to make sure they matched the expected checksum. This morning I performed two

[Correction]:Is install42.iso lagging behind cd42.iso and individual *file sets*?

2007-09-29 Thread Martin Gignac
As someone kindly pointed out I was using the term packages when I should have used file sets. -Martin

Re: Is install42.iso lagging behind cd42.iso and individual packages?

2007-09-29 Thread Martin Gignac
For the installation file sets you can use the download script from http://www.bsdforums.org/forums/showthread.php?s=threadid=22727 Besides using these sets to create your own ISO you alternatively can use them in the environment friendly USB-mediazine method as described in

Re: need a machine for an itanium port

2007-06-08 Thread Martin Gignac
One more just donated $100. And here's another one. Ditto. -Martin -- Suburbia is where the developer bulldozes out the trees, then names the streets after them. --Bill Vaughan

Re: ipsec vpn: freebsd and openbsd

2006-10-02 Thread Martin Gignac
ipsec between freebsd and openbsd didn't turn up anything on Google directly related to what you seem to want to do (at least for me), so I guess you'll have to look at the FreeBSD side of things: http://www.freebsd.org/doc/en_US.ISO8859-1/books/handbook/ipsec.html

Re: ipsec vpn: freebsd and openbsd

2006-10-02 Thread Martin Gignac
I agree with you Han. If Kintaro finds that configuring an IPsec VPN between a FreeBSD and an OpenBSD machine is too complicated, OpenVPN installed on both machines may offer an easier alternative. -Martin On 10/2/06, Han Boetes [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: kintaro oe wrote: I'm setting up

Re: ipsec vpn: freebsd and openbsd

2006-10-03 Thread Martin Gignac
IPsec is based on standards (RFCs) while OpenVPN is not (it is based on standard SSL, though). I guess the best way to make your mind up is to actually go to the OpenVPN web site (http://openvpn.net/) and read up on it. There's some good info there. Also, a visit on Google with keywords openvpn

Re: How to start up arpwatch on boot?

2006-10-04 Thread Martin Gignac
What's the OpenBSD way to start up arpeatch (built from ports) uopn system boot? I think: http://www.openbsd.org/faq/faq10.html#rc will give you all you need. -Martin -- Suburbia is where the developer bulldozes out the trees, then names the streets after them.

Re: /var/mail/$USER not created [was: annoying openbsd mutt package]

2006-10-04 Thread Martin Gignac
Mutt tries to open $MAIL (which is obviously /var/mail/grios), not folder. The reason it only happens with openbsd installed version is probably that obsd didn't create /var/mail/$USER (which most other system do, imho).I guess it's just different design philosphies. Probably just different

Re: ipsec vpn: freebsd and openbsd

2006-10-05 Thread Martin Gignac
As always, make sure to subscribe to the 'ports-security' mailing list, follow the stable ports tress, or at least visit http://www.openbsd.org/pkg-stable.html once in a while to make sure you've got the latest version (i.e. version with the most security issues fixed) of the OpenVPN package

Loading pf rules at boot with '-o' flag to pfctl...

2006-10-07 Thread Martin Gignac
Hi, While playing around with pf I've gotten used to passing the '-o' flag to pfctl to optimize my rulesets when loading them. However, I've noticed that /etc/rc does not pass the '-o' flag when loading the ruleset with pfctl during boot. Moreover, I couldn't find any apparent variable in the

Re: Loading pf rules at boot with '-o' flag to pfctl...

2006-10-08 Thread Martin Gignac
On 10/8/06, z0mbix [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: You are supposed to use the -o option to optimise your ruleset, then correct the ruleset in /etc/pf.conf so there should be no need to load the ruleset with -o everytime. Ok, thanks, my bad. I originally thought the intent of the flag was to permit

Re: Setting up a box to do NAT and Static IPs

2006-10-09 Thread Martin Gignac
On 10/9/06, Patrick - South Valley Internet [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: 1) Get two NICS for the OpenBSD box. 2) Give the first NIC an external routeable IP address, ex. 216.139.44.142 subnet 255.255.255.192 3) Give the second NIC an internal IP address, ex. 10.30.1.1 subnet mask 255.255.255.0 4)

Re: Setting up a box to do NAT and Static IPs

2006-10-09 Thread Martin Gignac
On 10/9/06, Patrick - South Valley Internet [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: 1) Get two NICS for the OpenBSD box. 2) Give the first NIC an external routeable IP address, ex. 216.139.44.142 subnet 255.255.255.192 3) Give the second NIC an internal IP address, ex. 10.30.1.1 subnet mask 255.255.255.0 4)

Re: Setting up a box to do NAT and Static IPs

2006-10-10 Thread Martin Gignac
What other information can I provide you to help me come up with a solution? A quick ASCII diagram of the PIX and the subnets in front and back might help (I'm the visual type). The only subnet you mention with public IPs in your first e-mail is 216.139.44.142/26, in which the IPs mentioned in

Re: Setting up a box to do NAT and Static IPs

2006-10-10 Thread Martin Gignac
We currently have a firewall using a Cisco PIX server. Everything on this firewall is using a static ip of some sort. There is a range of IP addresses inside the PIX firewall that are being used for DHCP. Just to make sure: you say everything on this firewall is using a static IP of some

Re: Setting up a box to do NAT and Static IPs

2006-10-11 Thread Martin Gignac
On 10/11/06, ropers [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: I've just had another thought: Why do the IP phones have to have public IPs? Is this because giving them NATted, private range IPs previously didn't work so well? The VoIP phones Patrick is using are probably (my guess) using the Session

Re: Setting up a box to do NAT and Static IPs

2006-10-11 Thread Martin Gignac
On 10/11/06, Girish Venkatachalam [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: If my memory serves me right, SIP actually has ALG built into the standard itself and www.opensip.org might already give you what you want. Hmm, wasn't aware of that. Do you have any specific RFC or 3GPP spec number that I could

Re: Setting up a box to do NAT and Static IPs

2006-10-11 Thread Martin Gignac
Yes, I've tried siproxd, but my lack of knowledge has caused me to fail to get this working properly. Then using your available public IPs should be the ticket. -Martin -- Suburbia is where the developer bulldozes out the trees, then names the streets after them.

Re: Setting up a box to do NAT and Static IPs

2006-10-11 Thread Martin Gignac
On 10/11/06, Jon Radel [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: If my memory serves me right, SIP actually has ALG built into the standard itself and www.opensip.org might already give you what you want. Hmm, wasn't aware of that. Do you have any specific RFC or 3GPP spec number that I could check out

Re: Setting up a box to do NAT and Static IPs

2006-10-11 Thread Martin Gignac
Hey Jens, On 10/11/06, ropers [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: OTOH, if you do have enough public IPs to play with, I'd still consider bridging and using only public IPs (then you don't need to do VLANs or NAT). To satisfy my own curiosity, what are the advantages in your view that bridging offers

Re: Setting up a box to do NAT and Static IPs

2006-10-11 Thread Martin Gignac
Hi again Jens, On 10/11/06, Stuart Henderson [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: On 2006/10/12 01:15, ropers wrote: Or maybe I have gotten a small chunk off of that big fat 123.0.0.0/8 network to play with. So let's say I have been allocated 123.123.123.0/24. Normally, you get a separate address

Re: Setting up a box to do NAT and Static IPs

2006-10-11 Thread Martin Gignac
On 10/12/06, Girish Venkatachalam [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: Very Sorry Martin. I was not in a good mood this morning and I also got angry since I didn't know enough to help you out. Have a nice day! Hope you don't take it to heart. No sweat. :-) -- Suburbia is where the developer

Re: Setting up a box to do NAT and Static IPs

2006-10-11 Thread Martin Gignac
On 10/11/06, Girish Venkatachalam [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: On Wed, Oct 11, 2006 at 12:22:06PM -0400, Martin Gignac wrote: On 10/11/06, Girish Venkatachalam [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: If my memory serves me right, SIP actually has ALG built into the standard itself and www.opensip.org might

Re: Setting up a box to do NAT and Static IPs

2006-10-11 Thread Martin Gignac
On 10/12/06, Martin Gignac [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: Yeah, I'm familiar with 3261. However the SIP proxy that 3261 talks about has a completely different function than what an ALG/SBC does. Maybe I shouldn't have used the term SIP proxy in my previous e-mails. My bad. I don't know if it'll

Re: Simple Networking Newbie questions

2006-10-12 Thread Martin Gignac
On 10/12/06, Girish Venkatachalam [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: 2) My second question relates to vlan(4). This link seem good: http://wiki.openwrt.org/OpenWrtDocs/NetworkInterfaces -Martin -- Suburbia is where the developer bulldozes out the trees, then names the streets after them.

pf: 'block drop' used, but ICMP unreachables returned anyway...

2006-10-12 Thread Martin Gignac
Consider the following setup (OpenBSD 4.0-current): Win PC (vlan1) [OpenSD FW] (vlan0) Host 1. With the following pf ruleset: set skip on { lo0 } scrub all fragment reassemble block drop all A ping command on the Windows PC towards the Host (172.23.1.21) gives the following

Re: pf: 'block drop' used, but ICMP unreachables returned anyway...

2006-10-12 Thread Martin Gignac
On 10/13/06, Joe Gibbens [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: I'm guessing its because the default state policy is floating. Just looking at the rules provided, the traffic should be able to pass through. Funny you should mention that because this is what I initially thought (that at #2 traffic should

Re: c.93.3 not found when installing packages

2006-10-13 Thread Martin Gignac
On 10/13/06, Bernd Schoeller [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: Do I have to switch to using ports? Any other fix for the problem? A quick fix that worked for me (don't know if it's bad to do this or not, though): # cd /usr/lib # ln -s libc.so.40.0 libc.so.39.3 -Martin -- Suburbia is where the

Re: pf: 'block drop' used, but ICMP unreachables returned anyway...

2006-10-13 Thread Martin Gignac
On 10/13/06, Kian Mohageri [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: Check out the 3 articles on PF by Daniel Hartmeier (OpenBSD developer). I found them to be very clear and concise and I'm pretty sure his explanations will help you out. http://www.undeadly.org Thanks for the suggestion! One of these

Re: c.93.3 not found when installing packages

2006-10-15 Thread Martin Gignac
On 10/13/06, Joachim Schipper [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: A quick fix that worked for me (don't know if it's bad to do this or not, though): # cd /usr/lib # ln -s libc.so.40.0 libc.so.39.3 It is, libc bumps happen when functions change in interesting ways. A-ha. Good to know. :-)

Re: cisco 831 cisco 7960 behind openbsd nat/firewal

2006-10-17 Thread Martin Gignac
I've just noticed that Daniel and Bryan have been discussing the subject at some length in more detail than I have. I guess you can forget about my post. :-) -Martin -- Suburbia is where the developer bulldozes out the trees, then names the streets after them.

Is doing a network restore from bsd.rd at all possible?

2006-10-19 Thread Martin Gignac
Hi, I've been playing with dump(8) recently and have tried two different ways of using it: backing up to a file on a USB drive, and backing up to a remote box by specifying a remote file and using SSH in lieu of RSH. I was also planning to try to write to a file on a remote machine via NFS but I

Re: Is doing a network restore from bsd.rd at all possible?

2006-10-19 Thread Martin Gignac
On 10/19/06, Michal Soltys [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: You can pipe ftp's output to restore. Hey man, great idea! I'll try it out. Thanks! -Martin -- Suburbia is where the developer bulldozes out the trees, then names the streets after them.

Re: Is doing a network restore from bsd.rd at all possible?

2006-10-19 Thread Martin Gignac
On 10/19/06, Bob Beck [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: My typical way to do his is find my latest dump(s) on tape or elsewhere - chuck them on an nfs server accesible to the machine to be restored, boot from bsd.rd, mount the nfs location with the dump files and proceed. That's why I'd *like*

Re: Is doing a network restore from bsd.rd at all possible?

2006-10-19 Thread Martin Gignac
On 10/19/06, Martin Gignac [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: Hey man, great idea! I'll try it out. Yup, tried a restore(8) via HTTP and it worked fine! Thanks again for the tip. -Martin -- Suburbia is where the developer bulldozes out the trees, then names the streets after them

Re: OpenVPN Server and nice setting on OpenBSD

2006-10-20 Thread Martin Gignac
On 10/19/06, Bill [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: The problem was with the ping that happens between OpenVPN endpoints not being returned and the connection resetting every minute or so. From the OpenVPN man page: --snip-- --ping n Ping remote over the

Re: OpenVPN Server and nice setting on OpenBSD

2006-10-20 Thread Martin Gignac
On 10/20/06, Bill Chmura [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: I have set verbosity to 5 and watched it. I get lots of W (Writes) and R's (Reads) while it is idle, which I was thinking was the pings. On the client side I would see WRWRWRWRWRW... (drop and reset) I've never had problems with

Re: OpenVPN server writes to /etc

2006-10-23 Thread Martin Gignac
On 10/23/06, z0mbix [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: Also, OpenVPN 2.0.6 is quite old now. The latest release is 2.0.9. Yes, but if you look at the changelog (http://openvpn.net/changelog.html) you'll see that versions 2.0.7 - 2.0.9 only address Windows-specific issues, hence I think this is why the

Re: vpn difficulties

2006-12-04 Thread Martin Gignac
On 12/4/06, Jacob Yocom-Piatt [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: if anyone knows, what is a good way to test a host 2 host VPN? Since I'm not routing two different networks across the VPN, there is nothing easy to test like pinging a host on the other end of the tunnel. this is easy enough to setup

Re: vpn difficulties

2006-12-05 Thread Martin Gignac
On 12/5/06, Ryan Corder [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: I never said that ping wasn't a good test...if I could use ping I would. However, in the setup where I have two machines, A and B that have addresses 192.168.2.5 and 192.168.2.6 respectively and an IPSec tunnel setup as so: A - ike esp from

Re: pf-altq-bandwith_problem

2008-05-18 Thread Martin Gignac
I will try, thanks for the info. Just to make sure I'm not dealing with a bug can anyone try this??... just set a global limit to a interface ($int_if), then do a ftp transfer to the gateway ( the one with the PF+ALTQ) and time the put and get transfers with a large file. When I get a

Re: pf-altq-bandwith_problem

2008-05-18 Thread Martin Gignac
If that's what you meant, isn't that behavior normal? Considering that (as the PF user's guide puts it): Note that queueing is only useful for packets in the outbound direction. Once a packet arrives on an interface in the inbound direction it's already too late to queue it -- it's

Possible to change indent length from 8 to 4 spaces in mg?

2008-05-18 Thread Martin Gignac
Hi, I've been trying to figure out how to change the indent length when pressing the TAB key in mg from the standard 8 spaces to 4, but I haven't been able to find any setting that would seem to achieve this. The man page and Google didn't turn up anything. Is this at all possible in mg?

Re: What's a patch? Can I build only changes to openbsd source?

2008-05-20 Thread Martin Gignac
On Tue, 20 May 2008, Kendall Shaw wrote: I'm following -stable until I read some more, and I'm unclear on some aspects of syncing source. There was an earlier post about why there are no security patches for 4.3 listed at: http://www.openbsd.org/pkg-stable.html Is that different from:

Re: What's a patch? Can I build only changes to openbsd source?

2008-05-20 Thread Martin Gignac
On Tue, 20 May 2008, Kendall Shaw wrote: Can you also help me understand these words about -current, from the FAQ: There are also flag days and major system changes that the developers navigate with one-time tools, which mean that source-based updating is not possible. There are changes that

Difference (bug?) in display in pfctl, pftop and systat for an anchor filter rule?

2008-08-30 Thread Martin Gignac
Hi all, I have a question concerning some differences in pf rules diplay with regards to pfctl, pftop, and systat (using a 4.4 snapshot downloaded today). My scrub, NAT and filter sections in my 'pf.conf' look like this: scrub on $wan_if random-id reassemble tcp nat on $wan_if from !($wan_if)

Re: 4.3 hoststated renamed to relayd

2008-09-01 Thread Martin Gignac
The upgrade43 guide does not mention that /etc/ftpusers shouldmust be changed. Isn't it indicated here?: http://www.openbsd.org/faq/upgrade43.html#etcUpgrade -Martin

Re: weird PF behavior

2007-03-14 Thread Martin Gignac
I think this can be explained by the default state policy (which is floating) in pf. Consult the man page and look for 'set state-policy'. I think that by default, because you're letting the packets through in your first 'pass' rule you create state. When you get to the outside interface you

Re: weird PF behavior

2007-03-15 Thread Martin Gignac
On 3/15/07, Henning Brauer [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: do everything else but that. really. this is never ever your problem, except you do weird things with tunnels or the like. Gotcha. -Martin -- Suburbia is where the developer bulldozes out the trees, then names the streets after them.

Re: PF and the old SIP issue

2008-11-19 Thread Martin Gignac
OpenBSD PF firewall consisting of ext, DMZ, internal/private interfaces. VOIP server sitting in the DMZ. Multiple (pick any number, 5, 10, 100) SIP phones in the private LAN. Multiple mobile (pick any number, 5, 10, 100) SIP phones anywhere in the USA. (NOTE: Mobile means they are carried and

Re: PF and the old SIP issue

2008-11-19 Thread Martin Gignac
What do you mean exactly by just works? Are the external phones supposed to talk with the internal phones? Not directly, they go through the server I'm guessing only the SIP signalling goes through the Asterisk server, and not the RTP media (i.e. you don't do any kind of media anchoring).

Re: PF and the old SIP issue

2008-11-20 Thread Martin Gignac
unless you anchor/proxy all media as well on the Asterisk (I don't know Asterisk so I don't know if it does that). it does, and most people run it that way (canreinvite=no). Good to know. Thanks, -Martin

Re: Simpliest issue tracking software?

2009-09-22 Thread Martin Gignac
I am looking for an advice of which issue tracking system to use for a small team of admins (4 members)? Roundup? http://roundup.sourceforge.net/ -Martin

Re: dhcpd and mitel options

2009-03-23 Thread Martin Gignac
The Mitel phones complain that option 128 is missing (I take this to mean that it have the wrong format or type since it's obviously there) and goes no further. Have you tried taking a packet capture of the DHCP dialog when using Linux and when using OpenBSD, and then comparing the DHCP Offer

Re: 4.5 arrived in Canada

2009-04-17 Thread Martin Gignac
I'm in Montreal as well and just order them from the Computer Shop: http://www.openbsd.org/orders.html#ca/cshop -Martin

4.5 bsd.rd stalls during boot at rd0: fixed, 3800 blocks

2009-05-01 Thread Martin Gignac
Hi Misc, I am trying to re-install an OpenBSD 4.0-current machine from scratch by using the bsd.rd from a very recent 4.5 snapshot. However, during booting the system stalls at the line: rd0: fixed, 3800 blocks and stays there forever. I have tried booting from my OpenBSD 4.5 release CD but it

Re: 4.5 bsd.rd stalls during boot at rd0: fixed, 3800 blocks

2009-05-01 Thread Martin Gignac
Someone contacted me off-list and suggested I disable acpi in the bsd.rd kernel before booting it. It worked. boot boot bsd.rd -c UKC disable acpi EKC quit Thanks, -Martin

Dell Latitude D531 hangs on boot unless radeondrm disabled

2015-02-03 Thread Martin Gignac
Hi, This morning I installed the latest 5.7 snapshot from install57.fs and I've noticed that, unless I disable radeondrm in the kernel, the boot process hangs at setting tty flags. By disabling radeondrm I can successfully boot to the login prompt, but I am not able to start X. Is there a

pflog0 showing traffic for rule with no logging requested

2015-02-24 Thread Martin Gignac
Hi, With a fresh install of a 5.7 snapshot on amd64 (OpenBSD 5.7-beta (GENERIC) #805: Sun Feb 22 03:09:53 MST 2015) I have noticed the following: With this pf ruleset: $ sudo pfctl -s r block drop all pass all flags S/SA block return in on ! lo0 proto tcp from any to any port 6000:6010 block

Re: How to have pf filter packets on combination of incoming and outgoing interface (for packets transiting the firewall)?

2018-05-07 Thread Martin Gignac
> You could also replace the above with "pass in on $lab02 received-on $lab01". Oh, I completely missed the 'received-on' statement in the OpenBSD pf.conf man page! (I have to support a pfSense for the moment so I'm alternating between the OpenBSD and FreeBSD man pages [the latter does not

Re: How to have pf filter packets on combination of incoming and outgoing interface (for packets transiting the firewall)?

2018-05-07 Thread Martin Gignac
> It looks like 'received-on' would be a cleaner and shorter way to > achieve my goal by allowing me to specify inbound and outbound > interfaces in the same rule. > I think I spoke to quickly; it would be an alternative way, but not a shorter one as I would still need the initial "pass in lab01"

Able to boot laptop from installer kernel but not from installed kernel

2018-05-09 Thread Martin Gignac
Hello, I'm currently running Windows 10 on an HP ZBook 15 G4 and I am trying to install OpenBSD 6.3 to a USB key so that I can boot it on this laptop during times when I need something better than Windows for network troubleshooting (such as proper VLAN support). Unfortunately, while the install

Re: How to have pf filter packets on combination of incoming and outgoing interface (for packets tra

2018-05-09 Thread Martin Gignac
> If you want PF, go back and read about it. Learn to handle it in the > way it was designed, don't try to blend it to whatever you used > before. It useless if you do that. I get your point, I really do. I'm just trying to figure out a way *not* to have to specify each and every subnet behind a

Re: How to have pf filter packets on combination of incoming and outgoing interface (for packets tra

2018-05-09 Thread Martin Gignac
> Not sure if it's going to be any use for your particular setup, but if > these are coming in as AS External LSAs ("ospfctl sh da ext") and you > have a way to get an "External route tag" set on them, you can have > ospfd tag the routes with a route label, and then PF can match addresses > on

Re: How to have pf filter packets on combination of incoming and outgoing interface (for packets transiting the firewall)?

2018-05-07 Thread Martin Gignac
> I imagine you meant "pass out on $lab02 tagged from_lab01". You're absolutely right Ken! Thanks, -Martin

How to have pf filter packets on combination of incoming and outgoing interface (for packets transiting the firewall)?

2018-05-07 Thread Martin Gignac
Hello, In Juniper SRXes and Netscreen firewalls one defines security policies (firewall rules) according to a "from" security zone, and a "to" security zone. Rules within each "from-to" combo can then focus on allowing or blocking individual IP subnets if required. In Linux, the FORWARD chain is

Getting OpenBGPD to send connected network routing update on link failure?

2018-02-23 Thread Martin Gignac
Hello, I am currently experimenting with OpenBGPD uing OpenBSD VMs on VirtualBox. I've noticed that, given interface em1 to which I've assigned address 192.168.1.1/24, if I either execute 'ifconfig em1 down' or virtually unplug em1 from VirtualBox the following happens: 1. The 192.168.1.0/24

How to implement CARP master/backup with IPv6 RAs from OpenBSD firewall pair?

2018-07-26 Thread Martin Gignac
Hi, How does one implement a redundant OpenBSD firewall pair with IPv6? With IPv4 I would use CARP to have one of the boxes be the master/active while the other one is backup/standby. But with IPv6 I want to use Router Advertisements so that hosts on the internal network can use SLAAC for IPv6

Re: How to implement CARP master/backup with IPv6 RAs from OpenBSD firewall pair?

2018-07-26 Thread Martin Gignac
terface in > backup-state. > > Med Venlig Hilsen / Best Regards > Henrik Dige Semark > > On 2018-07-26 22:57, Martin Gignac wrote: > > Hi, > > > > How does one implement a redundant OpenBSD firewall pair with IPv6? > > > > With IPv4 I would use CARP to