Hi all,
On Tue, 8 Jan 2008 21:52:22 +0100
Good Good [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Free.fr is the first general public ISP in France to provide IPV6 to its
customers (it seems that I would be lucky) :)
Just a minor correction there: it is *not* -- Nerim has been routing /48
IPv6 blocks to every
Simon Vallet wrote, On 9/01/08 10:44:
Hi all,
On Tue, 8 Jan 2008 21:52:22 +0100
Good Good[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Free.fr is the first general public ISP in France to provide IPV6 to its
customers (it seems that I would be lucky) :)
Just a minor correction there: it is *not* -- Nerim has
On Wed, Jan 09, 2008 at 11:04:59AM +0100, Stiphane Chausson wrote:
In a [1]press communiqui (in french, sorry) they say they give 2^64 ip
address to every customer.
To me, total ipv6 beginner, it seems a lot !
It seems to be, though it is the bare minimum.
What is bad with /64 ?
This is
On Wed, 09 Jan 2008 11:04:59 +0100
Stiphane Chausson [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
In a [1]press communiqui (in french, sorry) they say they give 2^64 ip
address to every customer.
To me, total ipv6 beginner, it seems a lot !
What is bad with /64 ?
Are they sort of lying ? Playing with words ?
On Wed, Jan 09, 2008 at 11:04:59AM +0100, Stiphane Chausson wrote:
Simon Vallet wrote, On 9/01/08 10:44:
Hi all,
On Tue, 8 Jan 2008 21:52:22 +0100
Good Good[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Free.fr is the first general public ISP in France to provide IPV6 to its
customers (it seems that I would be
On 2008/01/09 11:04, Stiphane Chausson wrote:
In a [1]press communiqui (in french, sorry)
http://signal.eu.org/blog/2007/12/12/ipv6-chez-free/ is informative
too. (this is also in french).
they say they give 2^64 ip address to every customer.
To me, total ipv6 beginner, it seems a lot !
What
Good Good wrote:
Thank you for your answers.
Free.fr http://Free.fr is the first general public ISP in France to
provide IPV6 to its customers (it seems that I would be lucky) :)
Marc is right, with a /64 I cannot do anything, my ISP seems to be
skinflint (/64 or nothing).
talk to them
Thank you for your answers.
Free.fr is the first general public ISP in France to provide IPV6 to its
customers (it seems that I would be lucky) :)
Marc is right, with a /64 I cannot do anything, my ISP seems to be skinflint
(/64 or nothing).
A /48 should be better especially to be routed (in my
On 2008/01/08 22:15, Marc Balmer wrote:
Good Good wrote:
Thank you for your answers.
Free.fr http://Free.fr is the first general public ISP in France to
provide IPV6 to its customers (it seems that I would be lucky) :)
Marc is right, with a /64 I cannot do anything, my ISP seems to be
Hello,
My ISP (free.fr) now proposes to me a native connectivity in IPV6.
I wish to implement this functionality on my network, that here:
SwitchFirewallISP BoxISP Network/Internet
__ ___ ___
|PC1|---| | vr0 |
Good Good wrote:
[...]
The problem :
The /64 provided by my ISP is made to fuel only one ethernet segment and no
more.
So, it is not possible to route a part of the /64 to another ethernet
segment (the private segment).
ask them to get a /48 network. with a /64 network you can not do
On Jan 6, 2008, at 11:09 AM, Good Good wrote:
Hello,
My ISP (free.fr) now proposes to me a native connectivity in IPV6.
I wish to implement this functionality on my network, that here:
SwitchFirewallISP BoxISP Network/
Internet
__
On Sun, Jan 06, 2008 at 08:09:43PM +0100, Good Good wrote:
Hello,
My ISP (free.fr) now proposes to me a native connectivity in IPV6.
I wish to implement this functionality on my network, that here:
SwitchFirewallISP BoxISP Network/Internet
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