Thanks for the advice, everyone. It seems the best option is for me to simply go request a temporary chunk of addresses through a broker.
I managed to get on with AARNet (a single IP, not a /48, just for testing) using some linux.sh script, which was much easier than setting up 6to4, which I did about six months ago on one occasion. I was running Gentoo, so I needed to enable SIT support in the kernel and install the iproute2 package before their linux.sh script would work correctly. I'm guessing that ticking the "Request a /48 prefix" box will give me a few addresses that I can set up my server to route and advertise the scheme via radvd...correct? Additionally, seeing as though I get assigned a dynamic IP from the ISP, I suppose I'll need to do a new request each time my address changes when the power goes out. -- http://jeremy.visser.name/ -- SLUG - Sydney Linux User's Group Mailing List - http://slug.org.au/ Subscription info and FAQs: http://slug.org.au/faq/mailinglists.html
