▲ | deathanatos 5 days ago | |||||||
> starlink doesn't even give you publicly routable ipv6 unless you bypass the starlink router. If you've not got an Internet[-routable] address, are you truly connected to the Internet? > I looked in to managing ipv6 from a "i am making my own router" and no OS makes this simple. i tried with debian, and could not get it to route any packets. I literally wrote the guide for using a VM for ipcop and one of the "wall" distros; but something about ipv6 just evades me. TBH, I would think that this is just enabling v6 forwarding. That wouldn't do RA or DHCP, I don't think, but I don't think you'd want that, either. (That would be the responsibility of the upstream network.) | ||||||||
▲ | Dagger2 2 days ago | parent | next [-] | |||||||
You would want that. The upstream network can't do it for you, because RAs can't be routed. Same deal for DHCPv6 (although personally I'd say you can probably skip that and just use SLAAC). | ||||||||
▲ | genewitch 4 days ago | parent | prev [-] | |||||||
in order to have public ipv6 on starlink you need to manage the /56 they delegate to you into however many /64s that is (at least 8); i tested it with a store bought router, everything worked if you can do PD with DHCP[v6] or whatever. I returned the router because it was $200 and i will eventually figure it out on a VM. | ||||||||
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