Jump to content

This is the support site for Andrews & Arnold Ltd, a UK Internet provider. Information on these pages is generally for our customers but may be useful to others, enjoy!

IPv6: Difference between revisions

445 bytes added ,  19 September 2019
m
Tidy up
mNo edit summary
m (Tidy up)
(3 intermediate revisions by the same user not shown)
 
= IPv6 Only =
Here is our page about running an IPv6 only network: [[IPv6 Only]] network
 
= IPv6 Routers =
We have a wiki page about IPv6 Routers [[IPv6 Routers]]
 
= IPv6 for Customer Connections =
Customers are allocated a /48 block of addresses - this is usually per customer, and so a customer with multiple circuits or sites will have a /64 allocated from the larger /48 block. A /48 contains 65536 /64's and a /64 subnet is 18 million trillion addresses.
 
(Here, Customer Premises Equipment (CPE) refers to the router belonging to the customer which is being used at their end of the broadband line, and L2TP Network Server (LNS) refers to our equipment at our end of the broadband link.)
 
When the CPE logs in and negotiates PPP, we use IPV6CP to negotiate an interface identifier - this happens at the same time as IPCP happens to negotiate V4 connectivity. Once this has been negotiated, the CPE should perform an ICMPv6 routerRouter solicitationSolicitation - our LNSes will then reply with a ICMPv6 Router Advertisement in order to negotiate the [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Link-local_address Link Local] address in the form of FE80::, and will be based on the MAC address of the interface.
At this stage, there should be basic IPv6 connectivity to link-local, and if static routes and manually assigned addresses in place you should have a working connection. Our LNSes continue to send ICMPv6 Router Advertisements approximately once an hour (every 4096 seconds).
 
Optionally, if routes and addresses have not been configured statically, DHCPv6 can be used for automatic negotiation of the IPv6 WAN and LAN prefixes - using DHCPv6 is usually the default for our routers (i.e. the ZyXEL) that we supply.
 
If you want the whole /48 routed, untick the routing on all of the /64s you have, they disappear, and then tick the line routing on the /48 you have. Alternatively Support staff can help.
 
Your router will have to reconnect to AAISP before the new block is routed to your /128 WAN address. You will have to allow the new block through any firewall you have, and then route the new block appropriately on your local network.
 
{| class="wikitable"
editor
466

edits