On 07/08/2017 05:00 PM, Carlos E. R. wrote:
On 2017-07-08 20:42, James Knott wrote:
On 07/08/2017 10:53 AM, Carlos E. R. wrote:
Where's that fc00: coming from? That's one of the Unique Local Address
ranges. No idea. Well, it's coming from somewhere, unless you manually created it. Yes, I did, see my other post.
Perhaps you should call your ISP to find out if they're offering IPv6 and, if so, what's required to use it. People ask now and then, the answer is no answer or not for the moment. Maybe they're not offering it yet. However, in some ways it appears they are. For example they have an IPv6 address for their website. Well, they did a test with a few customers. I only know they did it, not what was the results.
I found some threads on the official support site, dated a year ago, and they (the ISP) says there is nothing.
Comments say that our routers do get an IPv6/128 address, but unusable, there is no prefix (don't ask me what that means). Seems they use 2A02:9100:
That is a valid address blocks. Currently only 1/8th the IPv6 address space is allocated to global unicast addresses, so all valid ones start with 2 or 3 and I've never seen one start with 3. BTW, over 3/4s of the address space has yet to be allocated to anything. However, you can get a /48 prefix from Hurricane Electric for free, but you'll have to set up a 6in4 tunnel. A prefix is like an IPv4 subnet mask, in that it determines how many bits are yours. So, if you have a /48 prefix, you have 128-48=80 bits to yourself, for 2^80 addresses or 65536 /64s. LANs normally have a /64 prefix. My ISP gives me a /56 for 256 /64s.
Some Spanish links, just to record them somewhere:
http://comunidad.movistar.es/t5/Soporte-T%C3%A9cnico-de-Fibra-%C3%93ptica/Co...
http://comunidad.movistar.es/t5/Soporte-T%C3%A9cnico-de-Fibra-%C3%93ptica/So...
https://www.telefonica.com/es/web/public-policy/blog/articulo/-/blogs/descub...
The last one was a test done at Sevilla (29/06/2016). It mentions they assigned /64 to mobile clients. SLAAC.
I don't read Spanish, but my ISP also provides IPv6 to their cell network. My phone has an IPv6 address and all IPv4 traffic uses 464XLAT to send it over IPv6. With some phone models, even tethered devices get an IPv6 address. -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse+unsubscribe@opensuse.org To contact the owner, e-mail: opensuse+owner@opensuse.org