UK among nations that have done least
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Re: UK among nations that have done least
16-10-2013 3:16 PM
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http://wiki.aa.org.uk/Category:Router_TG582N
breaking my useual habit heres a link i'm sure you already have it but in case you don't its interesting reading, my advice is start at the bottom set of 12 "pages" under "R" and then read through the links in the documents section
its all .pdf's that will open as a page
Re: UK among nations that have done least
16-10-2013 3:27 PM
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As 'Krazeh says, my LAN does both native IPv4 and IPv6, and the router acts as a fully functioning IPv6 endpoint and firewall.
Re: UK among nations that have done least
16-10-2013 3:28 PM
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"In The Beginning Was The Word, And The Word Was Aardvark."
Re: UK among nations that have done least
16-10-2013 3:43 PM
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Quote from: purleigh My Draytek router doesn't require CLI commands to activate IPv6 (tunneled or native), the configuration is built into the normal web interface.
As 'Krazeh says, my LAN does both native IPv4 and IPv6, and the router acts as a fully functioning IPv6 endpoint and firewall.
funnily enough a lot of routers are configured at manufacture to do dual stack support and offer config options via the GUI without requiring CLI input, that doesn't stop the various parts from running in separate virtual server's
all of which isn't really relevant to the tg582n and how it provides the support which does require starting via CLI input or how its configuration is achieved and what it looses in order to provide it
Re: UK among nations that have done least
16-10-2013 4:04 PM
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Re: UK among nations that have done least
16-10-2013 4:12 PM
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Quote from: nanotm funnily enough a lot of routers are configured at manufacture to do dual stack support and offer config options via the GUI without requiring CLI input
So why do you think -
Quote from: nanotm home routers ... ... just don't have the processing power or the memory capability to provide all the extra services they would need to run in order to relieve the isp servers of the load for consumer addressing and still maintain full connectivity for the average number of devices on ipv6 whilst retaining the ipv4 capabilities they currently run, maybe they could do pure 6 fully but not a cat in hells chance there going to manage full 6 and full 4 without doubling the cpu + tripling the memory provisions, there fine for the tunnelled stuff because essentially its just ipv4 traffic there routing through the WAN side
Re: UK among nations that have done least
16-10-2013 4:18 PM
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Please stop posting things as facts, when they are in fact your opinion or hearsay. People are trying to help explain the intricacies of IPv6 on this thread (and others) but unfortunately keep getting sidetracked by having to correct your statements to ensure that other customers don't believe incorrect information.
Re: UK among nations that have done least
16-10-2013 4:20 PM
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"In The Beginning Was The Word, And The Word Was Aardvark."
Re: UK among nations that have done least
16-10-2013 4:27 PM
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@VFDoD - Short answer: no. Long answer: Start a new thread and we can discuss it further!
Re: UK among nations that have done least
16-10-2013 4:36 PM
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Re: UK among nations that have done least
16-10-2013 4:44 PM
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Guess which router they provide?
[quote=http://aa.net.uk/kb-broadband-ipv6-tech.html]Do A&A provide an IPv6 router
Yes, we ship the Technicolor TG582N with IPv6 enabled firmware as standard.
jelv (a.k.a Spoon Whittler) Why I have left Plusnet (warning: long post!) Broadband: Andrews & Arnold Home::1 (FTTC 80/20) Line rental: Pulse 8 Home Line Rental (£14.40/month) Mobile: iD mobile (£4/month) |
Re: UK among nations that have done least
16-10-2013 4:51 PM
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Quote from: nanotm i'd suggest you read up on multiplier attacks and mitigation /elimination of them but I'm not sure you'd be able to understand it, clearly your struggling to grasp that ipv4 is very different in operation from ipv6, never mind the concept that effectively changing ipv6 data into ipv4 and then switching it back is essentially the same as using a transformer to swap digital to analogue for transmission and then switching it back at the receiver in order to use it
Rubbish, rubbish, and yet more rubbish.
I do know about multiplier attacks - the cause, effects, and mitigation for them are no different under IPv6 compared to IPv4.
And your analogy of converting digital to analogue and back is - trying to stay polite - very flawed indeed.
The real facts are that for the bulk of traffic, there really isn't a lot of difference between IPv4 and IPv6 - station generates packet, sends packet to router, router looks up destination in routing table and forwards it on, next router looks up destination in routing table and forwards it, repeat until packet reaches destination network where final router will send it out on the local network to the attached device (or if there is no attached device with that address, it will either reply with an ICMP message to say so or silently drop the packet depending on how it's configured). Note that at no point in that chain have I differentiated between IPv4 and IPv6 because the process is the same - the prefixes may be longer, but the process is the same.
So, someone sends me a packet from their non-Plusnet address, the router examines the destination address and looks for a routing table entry that matches it. In the case of IPv6 it would most likely find an entry for 2a02:16c8::/32, for an IPv4 address it would most likely find an entry for 81.174.128.0/17 (both these are Plusnet PA allocations). On the internet backbone, it should never find a router for anything more precise than either of those two routes - and most definitely not a /64 or /128 route for IPv6 or a /32 route for IPv4
Quote from: vilefoxdemonofdoom Does ARP work with ipv6?
Not ARP - IPv6 uses a different mechanism, see Neighbour Discovery.
AIUI, in IPv6 they've moved away from broadcasts as we are used to using them in IPv4 land, in favour of multicasts (using link local self assigned addresses where appropriate). Different mechanism, same end result.
Re: UK among nations that have done least
16-10-2013 5:22 PM
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Quote from: jelv Andrews and Arnold (AAISP) have been providing IPv6 connections for many, many years and are are universally recognised as being the leaders when it comes to ISPs providing native IPv6 .
Guess which router they provide?
[quote=http://aa.net.uk/kb-broadband-ipv6-tech.html]Do A&A provide an IPv6 router
Yes, we ship the Technicolor TG582N with IPv6 enabled firmware as standard.
something I readily acknowledge and even provided a link for there wiki on the router, something a lot of people could do with reading
heres a quote from one of them
and now I will as requested stop posting
Quote Completely disabling the firewall seems to be necessary to allow IPv6 connections from WAN side to network, as even when IPv4 firewall is 'off', the IPv6 still seems to be firewalled
Re: UK among nations that have done least
16-10-2013 5:29 PM
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Re: UK among nations that have done least
17-10-2013 12:30 PM
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They had the effect of causing some proper, understandable explanations to be written.
(Ignoring all the personal attacks directed against you).
I think the moderators were turning a blind eye to these.
"In The Beginning Was The Word, And The Word Was Aardvark."
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