Re: SOHO IPv6 switches

2022-01-19 Thread Sean Donelan
On Tue, 18 Jan 2022, Brandon Martin wrote: The Netgear GS108T is my typical go-to "not a dumb switch". 8 ports for about $80. Make sure you get the v3 if you want most of the modern IPv6 L2 features (you also get some very limited L3 capabilities). The v2 lacks most of them and is still rea

Re: SOHO IPv6 switches

2022-01-18 Thread Bjørn Mork
Brandon Martin writes: > The Netgear GS108T is my typical go-to "not a dumb switch". 8 ports > for about $80. > > Make sure you get the v3 if you want most of the modern IPv6 L2 > features (you also get some very limited L3 capabilities). Extra bonus with the GS108Tv3, and anything else based

Re: SOHO IPv6 switches

2022-01-18 Thread Brandon Martin
The Netgear GS108T is my typical go-to "not a dumb switch". 8 ports for about $80. Make sure you get the v3 if you want most of the modern IPv6 L2 features (you also get some very limited L3 capabilities). The v2 lacks most of them and is still readily available on the market. -- Brandon M

Re: SOHO IPv6 switches

2022-01-18 Thread Mikael Abrahamsson via NANOG
On Tue, 18 Jan 2022, Sean Donelan wrote: What's the goto SOHO-class switch for IPv6? Zyxel/Netgear/TP-Link all have switches in the 100-200USD range that can do some basic stuff (filter on ethertype, some DHCPv6/RA inspection, SNMP polling via IPv6 etc). I was surprised by what I found (an

Re: SOHO IPv6 switches

2022-01-18 Thread Nick Hilliard
Sean Donelan wrote on 18/01/2022 11:28: The top two capabilities: 1) MLD snooping and 2) a simple way to keep IPv6 off certain ports (i.e. ancient 10/100 devices, which don't like it. controlling the multicast floods may also help them). Most people don't use ipv6 multicast in anger (i.e. anyth