On Sun, Sep 05, 2010 at 02:14:20PM -0400, Simon Comeau Martel wrote: | 2010/9/5 Martin Pelikan <martin.peli...@gmail.com> | | > | > I can't think of a reason why two ISP's can't configure their routers' | > IPs manually. IMO autoconf is for end-users only. | | | | I am an end-user; not an ISP. I need autoconf to find what's my IPv6 default | gateway. And I need to have a router on my LAN telling my devices how to | configure themselves. Or am I missing something? Is the only "clean" | solution to statically configure my default route on my OpenBSD router? I | can't really do that; since my ISP assume I would be using autoconf to find | it, it could change at any time... | | Just to make sure things are clear, I have bean given by my ISP a /64 for my | router interface, and a /56 for my LAN.
You received a /64 for your router interface ? Or are you in a /64 subnet with other customers ? The setup sounds weird to me. To what address is your ISP forwarding that /56 ? | Would I need to configure two OpenBSD boxes? One establishing the PPPOE | connection to my ISP with autoconf, and the other one with rtadvd running. | (With static routes between the two OpenBSD boxes). That would be somewhat | overkill... That would still require forwarding on the machine doing autoconf... Paul 'WEiRD' de Weerd -- >++++++++[<++++++++++>-]<+++++++.>+++[<------>-]<.>+++[<+ +++++++++++>-]<.>++[<------------>-]<+.--------------.[-] http://www.undeadly.org