On 12/08/2019 19.42, Per Jessen wrote:
Carlos E. R. wrote:
Aug 12 18:20:44 Isengard systemd[1]: Started IPv6 Router Advertisement Daemon. Aug 12 18:20:44 Isengard radvd[10523]: version 2.17 started Aug 12 18:20:44 Isengard radvd[10523]: IPv6 forwarding setting is: 0, should be 1 or 2 Aug 12 18:20:44 Isengard radvd[10523]: IPv6 forwarding seems to be disabled, but continuing anyway
Fyi, forwarding is usually enabled on a router, that's why it is complaining.
Ah, I see.
Printer status has changed:
TCP/IP(v6) Status: Ready
Link-Local address: FE80::21E:BFF:FE08:4CCB Stateless (from Router): FC00:1234:5678:9000:21E:BFF:FE08:4CCB Stateless (from Router): FC00::21E:BFF:FE08:4CCB Stateful (from DHCPv6): Not configured
Ping to it works. Web page does, to <http://[fc00::21e:bff:fe08:4ccb]/:>
Very much surprised! :-o
Good :-)
Question:
Can dnsmasq do this job? Because if it can, it could set at the same time both name and IP for IPv6 addresses in my LAN.
It might - as a dhcpv6 server. Yep, I think that ought to work fine.
Problem is, there is a dhcpv6 server on the router, I should not interfere with it.
But as posted in thread "What is this nfs error?", I had to disable IPv6 DNS on both computers because it interferes badly with nfs :-(
Actually, there is more likely something wrong in the environment, nfs over ipv6 works fine. Did you update /etc/exports ?
Not on this machine. On the other, and days before, and on another mount. The entries are by IP, not name. But the entries on client fstab are by name, so it is possible it prefers to use IPv6, which the server nfs does not provide. Still, an error should produce an error and an abort, not thousands of log entries per second, repeated. The problem was from rpc services used by nfs. -- Cheers / Saludos, Carlos E. R. (from 15.0 x86_64 at Telcontar)