I hope this is the right place to ask; if not, a gentle nudge in
the right direction would be most appreciated.
I registered for an IPv6 tunnel from www.freenet6.net, and they
send me the following Perl script (modified to work behind a NAT
router according to the "IPv6-behind-NAT" instructions at
<URL:http://www.daemonnews.org/200009/ipv6.html>):
---8<-----
$if='gif0'; # Via ifconfig | grep
# Somes informations about tunnels values
print "This script will create a tunnel between this
computer\n";
print "and the Freenet6 server (tunnels server)\n";
print "Your IPv6 address (your tunnel end point) is
3ffe:b00:c18:1fff:0:0:0:461 \n";
print "We establish a tunnel to the Freenet6 server at
3ffe:b00:c18:1fff:0:0:0:460 \n";
print "Your IPv4 address is : 216.224.193.50 \n";
print "The IPv4 address of the Freenet6 server is :
206.123.31.102 \n";
# Setup the tunnel with values from Freenet6
system(`gifconfig $if 10.0.0.2 206.123.31.102`);
system(`ifconfig $if inet6 3ffe:b00:c18:1fff:0:0:0:461
3ffe:b00:c18:1fff:0:0:0:460 prefixlen 128 alias`);
system(`ifconfig $if up`);
system(`route add -inet6 default 3ffe:b00:c18:1fff:0:0:0:461`);
---8<-----
This works well; I can ping6 the world to my heart's content.
The next step I want to try, though is integrating this
IPv6-over-4 tunnel into my rc.conf (4.2-STABLE, BTW). Frankly,
I'm completely bewildered by the IPv6 section of that file.
What values do I plug in, and where? I want this machine to be
a IPv6 gateway for the other machines on my LAN, too.
Any help appreciated!
--
Kirk Strauser
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