Date:Thu, 17 Nov 2016 23:40:02 +0100
From:Rhialto
Message-ID: <20161117224002.gh21...@falu.nl>
| At first I had no rtadvd.conf file, but in december 2015 (was that for
| 7.0?) I found I had to have that file, but it could be empty.
I am not running rtadvd on anyt
Date:Thu, 17 Nov 2016 22:28:32 +0100
From:Jan Danielsson
Message-ID: <03604c00-17eb-f3de-d69e-ec070d06a...@gmail.com>
|This is a proper global /48 network.
That sounds good, but what is "this" there - that is, to whom is
that /48 assigned, you or the ISP ?
|
On Thu, Nov 17, 2016 at 2:57 PM, Jan Danielsson
wrote:
> On 2016-11-17 22:36, Andy Ruhl wrote:
>>>- The router can ping6 the host1's IPv6 address.
>>
>> I'm not really sure if this is relevant, but what source IP are you
>> using when this happens? Can you force it to be the external global
>>
On Wed 16 Nov 2016 at 01:26:58 +0700, Robert Elz wrote:
> Greg Troxel said:
> | I am unclear on if you need a rtadvd.conf.
>
> That should only be required if some of the default parameters need to be
> altered. If the default values are OK, then rtadvd will supply them without
> the co
On 2016-11-17 22:36, Andy Ruhl wrote:
>>- The router can ping6 the host1's IPv6 address.
>
> I'm not really sure if this is relevant, but what source IP are you
> using when this happens? Can you force it to be the external global
> address?
Using -S of ping6?
router$ ping6 -S
..
On Thu, Nov 17, 2016 at 2:28 PM, Jan Danielsson
wrote:
>- The router can ping6 the host1's IPv6 address.
I'm not really sure if this is relevant, but what source IP are you
using when this happens? Can you force it to be the external global
address?
Andy
Hello,
Thanks to help from the list, I got past some initial IPv6
configuration issues; the router gets its address and prefixlength from
the ISP and a host on the LAN gets a subnet address from the router.
However, one issue remains, and I've been banging my head against it for
too long and I n