The Shorewall Team is pleased to announce the release of Shorewall 4.2.4
including IPv6 support.

Minimun system requirements for taking advantage of IPv6 support:

   - Kernel 2.6.25 or later.
   - iptables 1.4.0 or later with 1.4.1 strongly recommended.
   - Perl 5.10 if you wish to use DNS names in your IPv6 config files.
     In that case you will also have to install Perl Socket6 support.

Two new packages are included:

   a) Shorewall6 - analagous to Shorewall-common but handles IPv6
      rather than IPv4.

   b) Shorewall6-lite - analagous to Shorewall-lite but handles IPv6
      rather than IPv4.

The packages store their configurations in /etc/shorewall6/ and
/etc/shorewall6-lite/ respectively.

The fact that the packages are separate from their IPv4 counterparts
means that you control IPv4 and IPv6 traffic separately (the same
way that Netfilter does). Starting/Stopping the firewall for one
address family has no effect on the other address family.

For additional information, see http://www.shorewall.net/IPV6Support.html.

Other features of Shorewall6 are:

   a) There is no NAT of any kind (most people see this as a giant step
      forward). When an ISP assigns you a public IPv6 address, you are
      actually assigned an IPv6 'prefix' which is like an IPv4
      subnet. A 64-bit prefix allows 4 billion squared individual hosts
      (the size of the current IPv4 address space squared).

   b) The default zone type is ipv6.

   c) The currently-supported interface options in Shorewall6 are:

        blacklist
        bridge
        dhcp
        nosmurfs (traps multicast and Subnet-router anycast addresses
        used as the packet source address).
        optional
        routeback
        sourceroute
        tcpflags
        mss
        forward (setting it to 0 makes the router behave like a host
                 on that interface rather than like a router).

   d)  The currently-supported host options in Shorewall6 are:

        blacklist
        routeback
        tcpflags

   e)  Traffic Shaping is disabled by default. The tcdevices and
       tcclasses files are address-family independent so
       to use the Shorewall builtin Traffic Shaper, TC_ENABLED=Internal
       should be specified in Shorewall or in Shorewall6 but not in
       both. In the configuration where the internal traffic shaper is
       not enabled, CLEAR_TC=No should be specified.

       tcfilters are not available in Shorewall6.

   f)  When both an interface and an address or address list need to
       be specified in a rule, the address or list must be enclosed in
       angle brackets. Example:

        #ACTION      SOURCE                                     DEST
        ACCEPT       net:eth0:<2001:19f0:feee::dead:beef:cafe>  dmz

       Note that this includes MAC addresses as well as IPv6 addresses.

       The HOSTS column in /etc/shorewall6/hosts also uses this
       convention:

           #ZONE      HOSTS                                     OPTIONS
           chat6      eth0:<2001:19f0:feee::dead:beef:cafe>

       Even when an interface is not specified, it is permitted to
       enclose addresses in <> to improve readability. Example:

           #ACTION      SOURCE          DEST
           ACCEPT       net:<2001:1::1> $FW

   g)  The options available in shorewall6.conf are a subset of those
       available in shorewall.conf.

   h)  The Socket6.pm Perl module is required if you include DNS names
       in your Shorewall6 configuration. Note that it is loaded the
       first time that a DNS name is encountered so if it is missing,
       you get a message similar to this one:

       ...
       Checking /etc/shorewall6/rules...
       Can't locate Socket6.pm in @INC (@INC contains: /root ...
       teas...@ursa:~/Configs/standalone6$

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