> On Jan 11, 2016, at 10:23 , James R Cutler <james.cut...@consultant.com> 
> wrote:
> 
>> On Jan 11, 2016, at 12:01 PM, Graham Johnston <johnst...@westmancom.com> 
>> wrote:
>> 
>> Are most CPE devices generally not IPv6 capable in the first place?  For 
>> those that are capable are they usually still configured with IPv6 disabled, 
>> requiring the customer to enable it?  For those CPE that are capable and 
>> enabled, is there a common configuration such as full blown DHCPv6 with PD?
> 
> I can’t speak regarding “most CPE devices” but for CPE = Apple Airport Extreme
> 
>       • At least since the AirPort Extreme 802.11n (AirPort5,117) was 
> released in 2011, the hardware has supported native IPv6 routing and 
> acceptance of PD from the WAN.
> 
>       • The default configuration for firmware 7.7.3 is automatic WAN IPv6 
> configuration, native IPv6 routing, and, acceptance of PD from the WAN. End 
> systems on the single LAN receive a /64.

To be more clear… The LAN receives a /64 from which end systems are able to 
construct one or more end system addresses using SLAAC.

> 
>       • No DHCPv6 is provided to the LAN through firmware up to the current 
> version 7.7.3. 
> 

The good news is that RDNSS is allegedly supported in recent firmware releases.

Owen

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