Landry Breuil <[email protected]> writes: > On Mon, Jul 18, 2016 at 11:27:56AM +0200, Quentin Rameau wrote: >> Hi Martin, >> >> > As discussed with landry@ and sthen@ this won't be merged. Your problem >> > could also be solved by using a NDP proxy, that's a solution we would >> > recommend if your ISP cannot fix his setup. >> >> Thanks for the answer! >> Too bad, although that may not be the most elegant solution and kind of >> a hack, that's really more handy than seting up an NPD proxy for each >> potential host behind the router. > > I think the NDP proxy is supposed to be *on* the router itself. > >> But yeah, that's just an excuse for my broken ISP... >> I'll keep that patch on my local source tree until I've found a better >> solution. > > I'm doing the same, since that's a solution that works for now, until > someone makes a port / tries to make an NDP proxy for OpenBSD. > https://github.com/DanielAdolfsson/ndppd was a candidate, but i didnt > manage yet to trick someone to look into that.
I've looked into it, it contains some Linux-specific bits. I'm not saying that it's undoable, as I didn't try too hard. However I've started writing an ND proxy that would work out of the box on OpenBSD, something basic that covers simple use cases. It is far too early to tell whether it would go in base or ports. I'll let people know how it goes. -- jca | PGP: 0x1524E7EE / 5135 92C1 AD36 5293 2BDF DDCC 0DFA 74AE 1524 E7EE
