On Thu, 17 Mar 2005 12:49:27 -0500 Michael Banta <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Ok, things are starting to make a little more sense, thank you all. > > I was ready to assign an IP of 2002: to a windows xp client when I > realized that this machine is behind a firewall and has a nat'ed address > of 10.0.10.x. I would not think that would be allowed. > > Is this a correct assumption? > > Thanks > Mike > > --------------------------------------------------------------------- > The IPv6 Users Mailing List > Unsubscribe by sending "unsubscribe users" to [EMAIL PROTECTED] Hi Mike, I believe 2002::/16(6to4) address block will only work if the machine using it is directly connected to the net, in this case, your Linux router. It will not work for clients behind it. Like others have mentioned earlier, get in touch with a tunnel broker so you can obtain proper IPv6 addresses for experimenting. Secondly, current best practice of radvd uses /64 to advertise, not /48. > Regards, Darryl Yeoh, MyBSD Malaysia, MyBSD IPv6 Team. - http://www.MyBSD.org.my (IPv4/v6) - http://tbroker.MyBSD.org.my (IPv4) http://www.ipv4.MyBSD.org.my (IPv4) - http://www.ipv6.MyBSD.org.my (IPv6) http://tbroker.ipv6.MyBSD.org.my (IPv6) --------------------------------------------------------------------- The IPv6 Users Mailing List Unsubscribe by sending "unsubscribe users" to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
