Koenraad Lelong wrote:
Op 07-06-16 om 12:17 schreef Carlos E. R.:
The router gets the prefix from the ISP, I understand. Everything connected to the router should get that prefix.
Or, everything gets a non-routable prefix instead, and the router does NAT (or something).
I think there is a misunderstanding. I get a /56 prefix from my ISP, i.e. 256 /64 subnets. Hosts directly attached to the router get an address in some /64 subnet (say #00).
Right. 2001:db8::
There I can add another router (my linux-firewall), so its "external" interface gets an address in that first prefix (#00).
2001:db8::2
The "internal" interface gets an address in another /64 subnet (via PD, some subnet other than #00)).
2001:db8::1:1
And these internal addresses are unknown to the first router (I think, or is there some ipv6 magic ?).
How does your internal network get a /64 network?
radvd should only emit to the internal interface, isn't it ?
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