Carlos E. R. wrote:
That's the local IP of the router. Yes, its MAC is F8:1A:67:91:F4:22. I can not choose the router IPv6 address, only on IPv4. I don't see how I could assign an alias to the router address :-?
That is, I want the router to be fc00::1, I can't.
Like I said, just use that address in your hosts file. BTW, my firewall does wind up with a ::1 address, but other computers use it's link local address for routing.
However, although the router has now DHCP6 enabled, the Linux computer does not obtain an IPv6 address from it. Yes, DHCP client (both 4 and 6) are enabled on the computer. I get a link local address instead.
You should have both link local and at least one fc00 addresses. You may want to call support on this.
The openSUSE firewall blocks it!
Turn off the firewall until you get things working. Then turn it on again and see what you have to do to fix whatever breaks.
So, I found a new bug in YaST: it forgot to open the firewall for it. Funny that a service for getting an IPv6 needs and IPv4 address first, in order to work... :-?
I have found some other issues in Yast.
mdns 5353/tcp # Multicast DNS mdns 5353/udp # Multicast DNS
I wonder if I should open that one :-?
I'm not sure why you'd need that. I use regular DNS and it works fine. I use a DNS with an IPv6 address, but any DNS should be able to provide both IPv4 A records and IPv6 AAAA records.
No, I mean the 64. I can put anything, but I don't know what to put.
The normal IPv6 is a /64. You only worry about others, if you're splitting up larger blocks into individual lans. For example, I get a /56 from my tunnel provider, which I could then split into 256 /64 networks. Since you're creating your own addresses, you may be able to use other subnets, but why bother. Go with the basics and get them going first. -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse+unsubscribe@opensuse.org To contact the owner, e-mail: opensuse+owner@opensuse.org