On 15/10/20 09:44, Harald Dunkel wrote:
On 10/14/20 10:18 AM, Stuart Henderson wrote:
On 2020-10-11, Henrik Friedrichsen wrote:
Hey,
my ISP provides connectivity via PPPoE. An IPv6 prefix is handed out via
DHCPv6 PD, which my OpenBSD gateway passes on to clients with the help
of router advert
On 15/10/20 08:02, Christian Weisgerber wrote:
On 2020-10-14, Fernando Gont wrote:
Set the VL to 30', and the PL to 15'. You could even set the VL to 15',
and the PL to 7.5', if necessary.
How does this influence the lifetime of privacy addresses?
It should affect it at all.
Temporary (p
Hello,
On 15/10/20 07:27, Henrik Friedrichsen wrote:
Hey,
On Wed, Oct 14, 2020 at 02:30:04PM -0300, Fernando Gont wrote:
And you may also look at this other one, which has recommendations for CPEs,
which in your case accounts for your DHCPv6-PD and RA daemons:
https://tools.ietf.org/html/draft
On 10/14/20 10:18 AM, Stuart Henderson wrote:
On 2020-10-11, Henrik Friedrichsen wrote:
Hey,
my ISP provides connectivity via PPPoE. An IPv6 prefix is handed out via
DHCPv6 PD, which my OpenBSD gateway passes on to clients with the help
of router advertisements using rad.
This works fine unti
On 2020-10-14, Fernando Gont wrote:
> Set the VL to 30', and the PL to 15'. You could even set the VL to 15',
> and the PL to 7.5', if necessary.
How does this influence the lifetime of privacy addresses?
Even with rad(8)'s defaults, I already need to specify an originating
non-privacy addres
Hey,
On Wed, Oct 14, 2020 at 02:30:04PM -0300, Fernando Gont wrote:
> And you may also look at this other one, which has recommendations for CPEs,
> which in your case accounts for your DHCPv6-PD and RA daemons:
> https://tools.ietf.org/html/draft-ietf-v6ops-cpe-slaac-renum-05
Looks like it's a p
On 11/10/20 12:52, Henrik Friedrichsen wrote:
Hey,
my ISP provides connectivity via PPPoE. An IPv6 prefix is handed out via
DHCPv6 PD, which my OpenBSD gateway passes on to clients with the help
of router advertisements using rad.
This works fine until the ISP disconnects me after 24h (force di
Hi,
On 14/10/20 05:18, Stuart Henderson wrote:
On 2020-10-11, Henrik Friedrichsen wrote:
Hey,
my ISP provides connectivity via PPPoE. An IPv6 prefix is handed out via
DHCPv6 PD, which my OpenBSD gateway passes on to clients with the help
of router advertisements using rad.
This works fine un
On 2020-10-11, Henrik Friedrichsen wrote:
> Hey,
>
> my ISP provides connectivity via PPPoE. An IPv6 prefix is handed out via
> DHCPv6 PD, which my OpenBSD gateway passes on to clients with the help
> of router advertisements using rad.
>
> This works fine until the ISP disconnects me after 24h (f
Hey,
my ISP provides connectivity via PPPoE. An IPv6 prefix is handed out via
DHCPv6 PD, which my OpenBSD gateway passes on to clients with the help
of router advertisements using rad.
This works fine until the ISP disconnects me after 24h (force disconnect
on ISP side). The gateway receives a ne
interface em0
ipv6rs
iaid 1
ia_pd 2 em1/1
In that example em0 would be the WAN interface and em1 the LAN interface.
Good luck,
M.
> Original Message
> Subject: Dynamic IPv6
> Local Time: July 8, 2017 4:42 AM
> UTC Time: July 8, 2017 2:42 AM
> From: inq...@protonmail
Hello Thomas,
if you're provider used dhcpv6 to announce you're ipv6 /64 to you then you
can look at many Comcast provider openbsd howtos.
I do the same with my Deutsche Telekom (vlan / pppoe / dhcpv6 for ipv6)
setup and it works this way for me.
Am 08.07.2017 4:44 vorm. schrieb "Thomas Smith
My ISP (Cox) supports IPv6 and I have this working on a MikroTik router--it
pulls an address and prefix, creates a default route, creates an address pool
for internal client, etc.
I've been working to configure a similar setup in OpenBSD 6.1 and I've been
unable to even get the outside interface
13 matches
Mail list logo