ayiya over ipv6
Shadow Hawkins on Wednesday, 13 October 2010 09:14:03
I've gotten an ayiya tunnel for a roaming laptop.
However, on the network I've tried, there is already ipv6-connectivity.
It seems like the tunnel was connected, but I could not ping the local endpoint from outside, and the laptop was using the existing ipv6-scope, not the new tunnel.
Is it possible at all to use ayiya when there is ipv6 already?
Should I disable ipv6 from the nic to force traffic through tunnel?
ayiya over ipv6
Jeroen Massar on Wednesday, 13 October 2010 10:00:13 However, on the network I've tried, there is already ipv6-connectivity.
Then why tunnel?
It seems like the tunnel was connected, but I could not ping the local endpoint from outside, and the laptop was using the existing ipv6-scope, not the new tunnel.
Fix your routing tables then.
Is it possible at all to use ayiya when there is ipv6 already?
Of course, but why bother?
Should I disable ipv6 from the nic to force traffic through tunnel?
Better idea is to disable the tunnel, as native is generally better than a tunnel.
ayiya over ipv6
Shadow Hawkins on Wednesday, 13 October 2010 10:48:18
The reason for the tunnel is to have ipv6-connectivity, but most importantly a fixed ip on the roaming laptop, no matter where it is connected physically.
The user should not have to worry if there is already ipv6 (unlikely, but possible), he should just plug and play (i mean work :-))
So I need to prepare the laptop, but I'm currently on a network with ipv6.
Would it make more sense to have a pop on our premises?
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