From bmanning@ISI.EDU Fri Sep 1 17:29:17 2000 From: bmanning@ISI.EDU (Bill Manning) Date: Fri, 1 Sep 2000 09:29:17 -0700 (PDT) Subject: DNS Root Cache Data In-Reply-To: <39AED619.4DD5F0EF@zama.net> from "Bradley W. McNamara" at Aug 31, 2000 03:03:05 PM Message-ID: <200009011629.JAA32022@zed.isi.edu> % % I have machines that are only connected to the 6bone. Where can I find % the data to populate the root cache file? Are there root nameservers on % the 6bone? If there isn't any root nameservers on the 6bone, are there % any "well known" nameservers that I can use? Thanks for any help. % % Brad McNamara % ZAMA Networks % I hope that we can announce a working ipv6 root testbed before the SD IETF. -- --bill From louis@trapezoid.com Fri Sep 1 20:07:30 2000 From: louis@trapezoid.com (Louis Zuckerman) Date: Fri, 1 Sep 2000 15:07:30 -0400 (EDT) Subject: DNS Root Cache Data In-Reply-To: <39AED619.4DD5F0EF@zama.net> Message-ID: You can request access to the "TLD Zone Files" from NSI. Try calling them and ask to have the forms faxed to you (that's how they do it). Also, make sure that if it doesn't say so in the contract, you get the ammendment that continues your access (otherwise they will cut you off after like 6 weeks). Louis Zuckerman louis@trapezoid.com On Thu, 31 Aug 2000, Bradley W. McNamara wrote: > I have machines that are only connected to the 6bone. Where can I find > the data to populate the root cache file? Are there root nameservers on > the 6bone? If there isn't any root nameservers on the 6bone, are there > any "well known" nameservers that I can use? Thanks for any help. > > Brad McNamara > ZAMA Networks > From jeff@muzi.com Sun Sep 3 20:55:19 2000 From: jeff@muzi.com (Li Hong) Date: Mon, 04 Sep 2000 03:55:19 +0800 Subject: Connetion to 6bone question Message-ID: <20000903195519.51398.qmail@muzi.com> Hi, all, I am new here. I have one question how to connect one standalone host to 6bone? (the host in Freebsd 4.1). I have read the document of "How to join the 6bone" in 6bone.net, how can I find a point to attach to? (My host in siue.edu). Thanks forward for all your kind help. Hong -- _______________________________________________ Get your free email from http://mail.muzi.com Powered by Outblaze From ryan@continuity.e-boxen.com Mon Sep 4 05:12:31 2000 From: ryan@continuity.e-boxen.com (Ryan Lortie) Date: Sun, 3 Sep 2000 22:12:31 -0600 (MDT) Subject: Connetion to 6bone question In-Reply-To: <20000903195519.51398.qmail@muzi.com> Message-ID: On Mon, 4 Sep 2000, Li Hong wrote: > Hi, all, > > I am new here. I have one question how to connect one standalone host to 6bone? (the host in Freebsd 4.1). > > I have read the document of "How to join the 6bone" in 6bone.net, how can I find a point to attach to? (My host in siue.edu). > > Thanks forward for all your kind help. > > Hong For connecting a single host to the 6bone, your best choice is freenet6. http://www.freenet6.net/ for FreeBSD 4.x (which includes Kame) the process is dead simple. Just select FreeBSD/Kame as your OS, fill in your nick, country and IP address into the form and submit. The form adds a DNS entry ..freenet6.net for your IP and generates a perl script. You run the perl script on your host and you're (in theory) online. Ryan From hswu@ns.6test.edu.cn Mon Sep 4 07:19:04 2000 From: hswu@ns.6test.edu.cn (Haisang Wu) Date: Mon, 4 Sep 2000 14:19:04 +0800 (CST) Subject: Connetion to 6bone question In-Reply-To: <20000903195519.51398.qmail@muzi.com> from Li Hong at "Sep 4, 2000 3:55:19 am" Message-ID: <200009040619.OAA11692@ns.6test.edu.cn> hi, Pls lookt at http://www.freenet6.net. best Haisang > Hi, all, > > I am new here. I have one question how to connect one standalone host to 6bone? (the host in Freebsd 4.1). > > I have read the document of "How to join the 6bone" in 6bone.net, how can I find a point to attach to? (My host in siue.edu). > > Thanks forward for all your kind help. > > Hong > > -- > _______________________________________________ > Get your free email from http://mail.muzi.com > Powered by Outblaze > From jeff@muzi.com Mon Sep 4 14:05:51 2000 From: jeff@muzi.com (Li Hong) Date: Mon, 04 Sep 2000 21:05:51 +0800 Subject: testing on Freenet6 Message-ID: <20000904130551.86061.qmail@muzi.com> Hi, all, First thanks for Ryan, Haisang and Cabral's quick reply to my question. I have run the perl tunneling script, seems it create a tunneling between Freenet6 server and my computer. But how do I testing on its connection? Anyone has some suggestion to me? Thanks. Hong -- _______________________________________________ Get your free email from http://mail.muzi.com Powered by Outblaze From simonb@deniability.org Mon Sep 4 16:06:18 2000 From: simonb@deniability.org (Simon Baker) Date: Mon, 4 Sep 2000 10:06:18 -0500 (CDT) Subject: No responce for tunnel request. In-Reply-To: <4.3.2.7.2.20000831164035.03a421c0@mail.viagenie.qc.ca> Message-ID: -----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- On Thu, 31 Aug 2000, Marc Blanchet wrote: - - >hummm. I'm surprised, we generally respond in the next day. We had many - - >since a week or two, maybe yours was lost. Someone should respond to you - - >today (it is end of the day here) or tomorrow. always send your emails for - - >us to ipv6@viagenie.qc.ca. I sent a mail to support@freenet6.net on August the 4th outlining a security issue with the script produced to use gif tunnels: Should I send this to yourselves also? Cheers, S. - ----------------------------------------------------------------- Feles mala! Cur cista non uteris? Stramentum novum in ea posui. - ----------------------------------------------------------------- http://deniability.org | simonb@deniability.org pgp-key: simonb+pgp@deniability.org - ----------------------------------------------------------------- -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- Version: 2.6.3ia Charset: noconv iQCVAwUBObO6cSnItNK85HiBAQEBIQP9HloukZ4NHbPvZIjZD7GGAW9dmUOHnYQw p5Hun1gw9JuRUOBMPtQCXBRfef3kCyB8A/mQzk6x3BGYQvaaVyUYX9tyO1ZE6lxx ltWBqI/lRapZjSBYcAy7Xnu7OLyDQLYkZNl4gwH2W/+UsqF3SoD5Vlf6hg90g7gY a0i3Nxl1LKc= =osG6 -----END PGP SIGNATURE----- From bwoods2@mail.gplsucks.org Mon Sep 4 16:11:36 2000 From: bwoods2@mail.gplsucks.org (William Woods) Date: Mon, 4 Sep 2000 08:11:36 -0700 (PDT) Subject: Now that I am attached to 6bone.... Message-ID: OK, I now have all of my FreeBSD boxes attached to te "6 bone", a few questions if I may: 1) Now what ?? I mean , is there a ipv6 compat browser avaliable for FreeBSD? 2) I know this thing is experamental but is there like a list of sites and ways to help out? Thanks, Bill From barry@linuxnl.za.net Mon Sep 4 16:34:01 2000 From: barry@linuxnl.za.net (Barry Rutten) Date: Mon, 4 Sep 2000 17:34:01 +0200 Subject: domain resolving problem Message-ID: <200009041534.RAA16040@home.linuxnl.za.net> Hi, when I try to ping eu.irc6.net for example is says: unkown host but when I resolve with host -t AAAA eu.irc6.net nothing goes wrong is there something in /etc/resolv.conf that I should add? I'm connected to 6bone via freenet6.net, using SuSE 6.4 thanks in advance, Barry Rutten From andrius@andrius.org Mon Sep 4 17:48:40 2000 From: andrius@andrius.org (Andrius Kasparavicius) Date: Mon, 4 Sep 2000 18:48:40 +0200 (GMT-2) Subject: testing on Freenet6 In-Reply-To: <20000904130551.86061.qmail@muzi.com> Message-ID: On Mon, 4 Sep 2000, Li Hong wrote: > I have run the perl tunneling script, seems it create a tunneling between Freenet6 server and my computer. But how do I testing on its connection? Anyone has some suggestion to me? Thanks. try ping6, traceroute6 to freeenet6 end ------------------------- Kasparavicius Andrius ________________________________________________________________________ http://www.andrius.org ICQ:17701001 tel.: +370 87 25630 nick: Casper AND-RIPE AND-6BONE From Frederick Bruckman Mon Sep 4 18:49:47 2000 From: Frederick Bruckman (Frederick Bruckman) Date: Mon, 4 Sep 2000 12:49:47 -0500 (CDT) Subject: Now that I am attached to 6bone.... In-Reply-To: Message-ID: On Mon, 4 Sep 2000, William Woods wrote: > OK, I now have all of my FreeBSD boxes attached to te "6 bone", a few > questions if I may: > > 1) Now what ?? I mean , is there a ipv6 compat browser avaliable for > FreeBSD? The development version of "lynx" supports ipv6. Frederick From Marc.Blanchet@viagenie.qc.ca Mon Sep 4 18:53:17 2000 From: Marc.Blanchet@viagenie.qc.ca (Marc Blanchet) Date: Mon, 04 Sep 2000 13:53:17 -0400 Subject: No responce for tunnel request. In-Reply-To: References: <4.3.2.7.2.20000831164035.03a421c0@mail.viagenie.qc.ca> Message-ID: <4.3.2.7.2.20000904134740.03c80cc0@mail.viagenie.qc.ca> At/À 10:06 2000-09-04 -0500, Simon Baker you wrote/vous écriviez: >-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- > > >On Thu, 31 Aug 2000, Marc Blanchet wrote: > >- - >hummm. I'm surprised, we generally respond in the next day. We had many >- - >since a week or two, maybe yours was lost. Someone should respond to you >- - >today (it is end of the day here) or tomorrow. always send your >emails for >- - >us to ipv6@viagenie.qc.ca. > >I sent a mail to support@freenet6.net on August the 4th outlining a >security issue with the script produced to use gif tunnels: Should I send >this to yourselves also? no. Our "service" is on a best effort basis. So, we do our best to serve your requests. Please send your comments directly to ipv6@viagenie.qc.ca (for generic tunnels) and support@freenet6.net (for freenet6 related questions). Regards, Marc. >Cheers, >S. > > >- ----------------------------------------------------------------- >Feles mala! Cur cista non uteris? Stramentum novum in ea posui. >- ----------------------------------------------------------------- >http://deniability.org | simonb@deniability.org >pgp-key: simonb+pgp@deniability.org >- ---------------------------------------------------------------- > > > >-----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- >Version: 2.6.3ia >Charset: noconv > >iQCVAwUBObO6cSnItNK85HiBAQEBIQP9HloukZ4NHbPvZIjZD7GGAW9dmUOHnYQw >p5Hun1gw9JuRUOBMPtQCXBRfef3kCyB8A/mQzk6x3BGYQvaaVyUYX9tyO1ZE6lxx >ltWBqI/lRapZjSBYcAy7Xnu7OLyDQLYkZNl4gwH2W/+UsqF3SoD5Vlf6hg90g7gY >a0i3Nxl1LKc= >=osG6 >-----END PGP SIGNATURE----- Marc Blanchet Viagénie inc. tel: 418-656-9254 http://www.viagenie.qc.ca ---------------------------------------------------------- Normos (http://www.normos.org): Internet standards portal: IETF RFC, drafts, IANA, W3C, ATMForum, ISO, ... all in one place. From ume@mahoroba.org Mon Sep 4 19:49:17 2000 From: ume@mahoroba.org (Hajimu UMEMOTO) Date: Tue, 05 Sep 2000 03:49:17 +0900 (JST) Subject: Now that I am attached to 6bone.... In-Reply-To: References: Message-ID: <20000905.034917.74742782.ume@mahoroba.org> >>>>> On Mon, 4 Sep 2000 08:11:36 -0700 (PDT) >>>>> William Woods said: bwoods2> 1) Now what ?? I mean , is there a ipv6 compat browser avaliable for bwoods2> FreeBSD? Try ports/www/mozilla+ipv6 or ports/www/w3m. Lynx 2.8.4dev.7 is IPv6 ready. But, it seems not enabled in ports/www/lynx-current. -- Hajimu UMEMOTO @ Internet Mutual Aid Society Yokohama, Japan ume@mahoroba.org ume@bisd.hitachi.co.jp ume@FreeBSD.org http://www.imasy.org/~ume/ From squaint@mediaone.net Sun Sep 3 21:25:46 2000 From: squaint@mediaone.net (Sean Quaint) Date: Sun, 03 Sep 2000 16:25:46 -0400 Subject: IPv6 and NAT Message-ID: <39B2B3CA.57A2F6F@mediaone.net> Hello, I have a linux box ipchains to hide a couple hosts behind a cable modem. It runs only IPv4. One of my private hosts is a Solaris 8 sparc with IPv6 enabled. I've run the perl script from freenet6.net, and have now the following ip setup: # ifconfig -a le0: flags=1000843 mtu 1500 index 2 inet 192.168.100.11 netmask ffffff00 broadcast 192.168.100.255 ether 8:0:20:76:78:69 le0: flags=2000841 mtu 1500 index 2 ether 8:0:20:76:78:69 inet6 fe80::a00:20ff:fe76:7869/10 ip.tun0: flags=2200850 mtu 1480 index 3 inet tunnel src 24.30.58.147 inet6 fe80::181e:3a93/10 --> fe80::ce7b:1f66 ip.tun0:1: flags=2200850 mtu 1480 index 3 inet6 3ffe:b00:c18:1fff::65b/128 --> 3ffe:b00:c18:1fff::65a ip.tun0:2: flags=2200850 mtu 1480 index 3 inet6 3ffe:b00:c18:1fff::65b/128 --> 3ffe:b00:c18:1fff::65a and my routing tables are: # netstat -rn Routing Table: IPv4 Destination Gateway Flags Ref Use Interface -------------------- -------------------- ----- ----- ------ --------- 192.168.100.0 192.168.100.11 U 1 6 le0 224.0.0.0 192.168.100.11 U 1 0 le0 default 192.168.100.2 UG 1 184 127.0.0.1 127.0.0.1 UH 6 28863 lo0 Routing Table: IPv6 Destination/Mask Gateway Flags Ref Use If --------------------------- --------------------------- ----- --- ------ ----- fe80::/10 fe80::a00:20ff:fe76:7869 U 1 0 le0 ff00::/8 fe80::a00:20ff:fe76:7869 U 1 0 le0 default fe80::a00:20ff:fe76:7869 U 1 17 le0 default 3ffe:b00:c18:1fff::65a UG 1 0 ::1 ::1 UH 1 0 lo0 Now when I try to ping an IPv6 addr, I get no route to host: # ping -A inet6 ftp.ring.gr.jp ICMPv6 Address Unreachable from gateway fe80::a00:20ff:fe76:7869 for icmp6 from fe80::a00:20ff:fe76:7869 to 2001:240:3:2::1 I'm sure the NAT configuration has something to do with this. But I'm not sure what to do about it. Thanks in advance, Sean Quaint From jim@thehousleys.net Mon Sep 4 21:24:55 2000 From: jim@thehousleys.net (James Housley) Date: Mon, 04 Sep 2000 16:24:55 -0400 Subject: domain resolving problem References: <200009041534.RAA16040@home.linuxnl.za.net> Message-ID: <39B40517.AADD52C9@thehousleys.net> This is a cryptographically signed message in MIME format. --------------ms94AD5EF968DEA475A37D9FBF Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit Barry Rutten wrote: > > Hi, when I try to ping eu.irc6.net for example is says: unkown host > but when I resolve with host -t AAAA eu.irc6.net nothing goes wrong > is there something in /etc/resolv.conf that I should add? > > I'm connected to 6bone via freenet6.net, using SuSE 6.4 > You might have to do a ping6 ..... I know the *BSDs have a seperate ping6. Jim -- microsoft: "where do you want to go today?" linux: "where do you want to go tomorrow?" BSD: "are you guys coming, or what?" --------------ms94AD5EF968DEA475A37D9FBF Content-Type: application/x-pkcs7-signature; name="smime.p7s" Content-Transfer-Encoding: base64 Content-Disposition: attachment; filename="smime.p7s" Content-Description: S/MIME Cryptographic Signature MIIH7gYJKoZIhvcNAQcCoIIH3zCCB9sCAQExCzAJBgUrDgMCGgUAMAsGCSqGSIb3DQEHAaCC Bb8wggKjMIICDKADAgECAgMDLRswDQYJKoZIhvcNAQEEBQAwgZQxCzAJBgNVBAYTAlpBMRUw EwYDVQQIEwxXZXN0ZXJuIENhcGUxFDASBgNVBAcTC0R1cmJhbnZpbGxlMQ8wDQYDVQQKEwZU aGF3dGUxHTAbBgNVBAsTFENlcnRpZmljYXRlIFNlcnZpY2VzMSgwJgYDVQQDEx9QZXJzb25h bCBGcmVlbWFpbCBSU0EgMTk5OS45LjE2MB4XDTAwMDgzMTExMjUzM1oXDTAxMDgzMTExMjUz M1owRTEfMB0GA1UEAxMWVGhhd3RlIEZyZWVtYWlsIE1lbWJlcjEiMCAGCSqGSIb3DQEJARYT amltQHRoZWhvdXNsZXlzLm5ldDCBnzANBgkqhkiG9w0BAQEFAAOBjQAwgYkCgYEAoecaMx4y p2rGru9O4EGcnetN3YJekZy3C7BvhxuvN+fboBpG2MSEUMBZzGX0CSZwBC1SapoZnyqzRItc OgUjSRrUhGfcSQ0nZv/dxaWb3L68+f4pDkALZ4WxR7feY8Cur2SrybM0wtpGcTioNWKbMNRd wDBxD/jgggHAa8hSo3sCAwEAAaNRME8wHgYDVR0RBBcwFYETamltQHRoZWhvdXNsZXlzLm5l dDAMBgNVHRMBAf8EAjAAMB8GA1UdIwQYMBaAFIir8WCDZlX05FjHRh3AYb0j18OMMA0GCSqG SIb3DQEBBAUAA4GBAE2PrU05luhZFcnuwpIpcqFqg+F5uuN4XO9tSX1KTCI1/YIUoTUuMyQa FO/n+Xm9xxv36v+RzVFbXjaDbg6m89qyWeawORQplL0JhXQmh10Anjg/RkBwt02FeLjbTZ7Z 6PiLOLKfuLPFYTcaSBavOIRbvVSWrK6o7DmZKhe1YgWVMIIDFDCCAn2gAwIBAgIBCzANBgkq hkiG9w0BAQQFADCB0TELMAkGA1UEBhMCWkExFTATBgNVBAgTDFdlc3Rlcm4gQ2FwZTESMBAG A1UEBxMJQ2FwZSBUb3duMRowGAYDVQQKExFUaGF3dGUgQ29uc3VsdGluZzEoMCYGA1UECxMf Q2VydGlmaWNhdGlvbiBTZXJ2aWNlcyBEaXZpc2lvbjEkMCIGA1UEAxMbVGhhd3RlIFBlcnNv bmFsIEZyZWVtYWlsIENBMSswKQYJKoZIhvcNAQkBFhxwZXJzb25hbC1mcmVlbWFpbEB0aGF3 dGUuY29tMB4XDTk5MDkxNjE0MDE0MFoXDTAxMDkxNTE0MDE0MFowgZQxCzAJBgNVBAYTAlpB MRUwEwYDVQQIEwxXZXN0ZXJuIENhcGUxFDASBgNVBAcTC0R1cmJhbnZpbGxlMQ8wDQYDVQQK EwZUaGF3dGUxHTAbBgNVBAsTFENlcnRpZmljYXRlIFNlcnZpY2VzMSgwJgYDVQQDEx9QZXJz b25hbCBGcmVlbWFpbCBSU0EgMTk5OS45LjE2MIGfMA0GCSqGSIb3DQEBAQUAA4GNADCBiQKB gQCzaVqX1NAWC3q1xV3pIZwjcs0STEv3fs/H+8pyJPRCUqxXleN7YXoXhOf9cjk4lLTq7WWn kgZeveBl9hm7lHl2TD65aHB1hBz0EXQAvAUsTwkDFzHM9EHUcsamXeKIRLCLLsRN8fDWhT5s 85WUeJF+QOmc0Y0VV47Cc+Uw3kb1TwIDAQABozcwNTASBgNVHRMBAf8ECDAGAQH/AgEAMB8G A1UdIwQYMBaAFHJJwnM0xlX0C3ZygX539IfnxrIOMA0GCSqGSIb3DQEBBAUAA4GBAGvGWekx +um27LED2N9ycv6RYEjqxlXde/BnjsZhcOdtwqU32J23FyhWBYvdXHVvxpGQxmxmcRPQEHxr kW+G4CE2LcHX6rIJrc8tbcaDUpv7u/6ch538t+l0kuRcl678fqzKDW9yemcsa3P1hvmd9QBu 9B0Hzp2egmMp75MJflXeMYIB9zCCAfMCAQEwgZwwgZQxCzAJBgNVBAYTAlpBMRUwEwYDVQQI EwxXZXN0ZXJuIENhcGUxFDASBgNVBAcTC0R1cmJhbnZpbGxlMQ8wDQYDVQQKEwZUaGF3dGUx HTAbBgNVBAsTFENlcnRpZmljYXRlIFNlcnZpY2VzMSgwJgYDVQQDEx9QZXJzb25hbCBGcmVl bWFpbCBSU0EgMTk5OS45LjE2AgMDLRswCQYFKw4DAhoFAKCBsTAYBgkqhkiG9w0BCQMxCwYJ KoZIhvcNAQcBMBwGCSqGSIb3DQEJBTEPFw0wMDA5MDQyMDI1MDFaMCMGCSqGSIb3DQEJBDEW BBTsqGk4TiRo63druCB18fUOK5GaEzBSBgkqhkiG9w0BCQ8xRTBDMAoGCCqGSIb3DQMHMA4G CCqGSIb3DQMCAgIAgDAHBgUrDgMCBzANBggqhkiG9w0DAgIBQDANBggqhkiG9w0DAgIBKDAN BgkqhkiG9w0BAQEFAASBgEN9XpiAWSXbXnU/Dg7Bn2dIHrlBCzFkkbmusCgggC012H/uP7aL sXXGwNCfUP2Sp83kSVEpKQfEul1i4wbEvEEkWNLnynEmSvkcodOzuuF/VKbjy7qS2L2S9fQy o0p+cKvcLP57er8ZKfYm+1HEAGWuK6i1CgS5+AxhKHo/ajfs --------------ms94AD5EF968DEA475A37D9FBF-- From jim@thehousleys.net Mon Sep 4 21:27:17 2000 From: jim@thehousleys.net (James Housley) Date: Mon, 04 Sep 2000 16:27:17 -0400 Subject: Now that I am attached to 6bone.... References: Message-ID: <39B405A5.52FD75AD@thehousleys.net> This is a cryptographically signed message in MIME format. --------------msC4706E52593C83427679D67C Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit William Woods wrote: > > OK, I now have all of my FreeBSD boxes attached to te "6 bone", a few > questions if I may: > > 1) Now what ?? I mean , is there a ipv6 compat browser avaliable for > FreeBSD? > > 2) I know this thing is experamental but is there like a list of sites and > ways to help out? > /usr/port/www/mozilla+ipv6. http://www.ipv6.org http://www.6bone.net http://www.kame.net and the list goes one. Jim -- microsoft: "where do you want to go today?" linux: "where do you want to go tomorrow?" BSD: "are you guys coming, or what?" --------------msC4706E52593C83427679D67C Content-Type: application/x-pkcs7-signature; name="smime.p7s" Content-Transfer-Encoding: base64 Content-Disposition: attachment; filename="smime.p7s" Content-Description: S/MIME Cryptographic Signature MIIH7gYJKoZIhvcNAQcCoIIH3zCCB9sCAQExCzAJBgUrDgMCGgUAMAsGCSqGSIb3DQEHAaCC Bb8wggKjMIICDKADAgECAgMDLRswDQYJKoZIhvcNAQEEBQAwgZQxCzAJBgNVBAYTAlpBMRUw EwYDVQQIEwxXZXN0ZXJuIENhcGUxFDASBgNVBAcTC0R1cmJhbnZpbGxlMQ8wDQYDVQQKEwZU aGF3dGUxHTAbBgNVBAsTFENlcnRpZmljYXRlIFNlcnZpY2VzMSgwJgYDVQQDEx9QZXJzb25h bCBGcmVlbWFpbCBSU0EgMTk5OS45LjE2MB4XDTAwMDgzMTExMjUzM1oXDTAxMDgzMTExMjUz M1owRTEfMB0GA1UEAxMWVGhhd3RlIEZyZWVtYWlsIE1lbWJlcjEiMCAGCSqGSIb3DQEJARYT amltQHRoZWhvdXNsZXlzLm5ldDCBnzANBgkqhkiG9w0BAQEFAAOBjQAwgYkCgYEAoecaMx4y p2rGru9O4EGcnetN3YJekZy3C7BvhxuvN+fboBpG2MSEUMBZzGX0CSZwBC1SapoZnyqzRItc OgUjSRrUhGfcSQ0nZv/dxaWb3L68+f4pDkALZ4WxR7feY8Cur2SrybM0wtpGcTioNWKbMNRd wDBxD/jgggHAa8hSo3sCAwEAAaNRME8wHgYDVR0RBBcwFYETamltQHRoZWhvdXNsZXlzLm5l dDAMBgNVHRMBAf8EAjAAMB8GA1UdIwQYMBaAFIir8WCDZlX05FjHRh3AYb0j18OMMA0GCSqG SIb3DQEBBAUAA4GBAE2PrU05luhZFcnuwpIpcqFqg+F5uuN4XO9tSX1KTCI1/YIUoTUuMyQa FO/n+Xm9xxv36v+RzVFbXjaDbg6m89qyWeawORQplL0JhXQmh10Anjg/RkBwt02FeLjbTZ7Z 6PiLOLKfuLPFYTcaSBavOIRbvVSWrK6o7DmZKhe1YgWVMIIDFDCCAn2gAwIBAgIBCzANBgkq hkiG9w0BAQQFADCB0TELMAkGA1UEBhMCWkExFTATBgNVBAgTDFdlc3Rlcm4gQ2FwZTESMBAG A1UEBxMJQ2FwZSBUb3duMRowGAYDVQQKExFUaGF3dGUgQ29uc3VsdGluZzEoMCYGA1UECxMf Q2VydGlmaWNhdGlvbiBTZXJ2aWNlcyBEaXZpc2lvbjEkMCIGA1UEAxMbVGhhd3RlIFBlcnNv bmFsIEZyZWVtYWlsIENBMSswKQYJKoZIhvcNAQkBFhxwZXJzb25hbC1mcmVlbWFpbEB0aGF3 dGUuY29tMB4XDTk5MDkxNjE0MDE0MFoXDTAxMDkxNTE0MDE0MFowgZQxCzAJBgNVBAYTAlpB MRUwEwYDVQQIEwxXZXN0ZXJuIENhcGUxFDASBgNVBAcTC0R1cmJhbnZpbGxlMQ8wDQYDVQQK EwZUaGF3dGUxHTAbBgNVBAsTFENlcnRpZmljYXRlIFNlcnZpY2VzMSgwJgYDVQQDEx9QZXJz b25hbCBGcmVlbWFpbCBSU0EgMTk5OS45LjE2MIGfMA0GCSqGSIb3DQEBAQUAA4GNADCBiQKB gQCzaVqX1NAWC3q1xV3pIZwjcs0STEv3fs/H+8pyJPRCUqxXleN7YXoXhOf9cjk4lLTq7WWn kgZeveBl9hm7lHl2TD65aHB1hBz0EXQAvAUsTwkDFzHM9EHUcsamXeKIRLCLLsRN8fDWhT5s 85WUeJF+QOmc0Y0VV47Cc+Uw3kb1TwIDAQABozcwNTASBgNVHRMBAf8ECDAGAQH/AgEAMB8G A1UdIwQYMBaAFHJJwnM0xlX0C3ZygX539IfnxrIOMA0GCSqGSIb3DQEBBAUAA4GBAGvGWekx +um27LED2N9ycv6RYEjqxlXde/BnjsZhcOdtwqU32J23FyhWBYvdXHVvxpGQxmxmcRPQEHxr kW+G4CE2LcHX6rIJrc8tbcaDUpv7u/6ch538t+l0kuRcl678fqzKDW9yemcsa3P1hvmd9QBu 9B0Hzp2egmMp75MJflXeMYIB9zCCAfMCAQEwgZwwgZQxCzAJBgNVBAYTAlpBMRUwEwYDVQQI EwxXZXN0ZXJuIENhcGUxFDASBgNVBAcTC0R1cmJhbnZpbGxlMQ8wDQYDVQQKEwZUaGF3dGUx HTAbBgNVBAsTFENlcnRpZmljYXRlIFNlcnZpY2VzMSgwJgYDVQQDEx9QZXJzb25hbCBGcmVl bWFpbCBSU0EgMTk5OS45LjE2AgMDLRswCQYFKw4DAhoFAKCBsTAYBgkqhkiG9w0BCQMxCwYJ KoZIhvcNAQcBMBwGCSqGSIb3DQEJBTEPFw0wMDA5MDQyMDI3MThaMCMGCSqGSIb3DQEJBDEW BBSRHdySVR4hAp/CFZlzgWZzCeXF9DBSBgkqhkiG9w0BCQ8xRTBDMAoGCCqGSIb3DQMHMA4G CCqGSIb3DQMCAgIAgDAHBgUrDgMCBzANBggqhkiG9w0DAgIBQDANBggqhkiG9w0DAgIBKDAN BgkqhkiG9w0BAQEFAASBgDvka4DOxG1iZcRj6xEcMYIcXaLh8sBufQIfr+3iNam/D2m9X1aI +JGNyCx5UN/ppZbjpKDNiXYmofFYZ/eDyqK5syEvCDsRDjuvBx5EJO70PBsuL4j3Mf5x7K2o iaV+ASRDVkUzqHZ/4H9IFfs+KoB3UYgoTGBzrN5tBqfm05QY --------------msC4706E52593C83427679D67C-- From brad@anduin.eldar.org Mon Sep 4 21:48:01 2000 From: brad@anduin.eldar.org (Brad Spencer) Date: Mon, 4 Sep 2000 16:48:01 -0400 (EDT) Subject: Now that I am attached to 6bone.... In-Reply-To: (message from Frederick Bruckman on Mon, 4 Sep 2000 12:49:47 -0500 (CDT)) Message-ID: <200009042048.QAA28983@anduin.eldar.org> On Mon, 4 Sep 2000, William Woods wrote: > OK, I now have all of my FreeBSD boxes attached to te "6 bone", a few > questions if I may: > > 1) Now what ?? I mean , is there a ipv6 compat browser avaliable for > FreeBSD? The development version of "lynx" supports ipv6. Frederick I believe that the Mozilla source base supports IPv6 as well. Brad Spencer - brad@anduin.eldar.org http://anduin.eldar.org [finger brad@anduin.eldar.org for PGP public key] From kscholte@pandora.be Mon Sep 4 22:33:22 2000 From: kscholte@pandora.be (Kim Scholte) Date: Mon, 4 Sep 2000 23:33:22 +0200 Subject: LAN using IPv6 Message-ID: <073501c016b7$c0bb4ae0$0b01a8c0@pico.ivision.cjb.net> This is a multi-part message in MIME format. ------=_NextPart_000_0732_01C016C8.83CE75B0 Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1" Content-Transfer-Encoding: quoted-printable Hello all, =20 I was wondering if it is possible to use IPv6 as the default protocol = for a lan. For the moment i have a linux server, which is connected to = the internet with a cable modem, and connected to a hub with another = nic. There also are some other clients connected to the hub (FreeBSD, = Win95, Win98 and 2 WinNT4 clients). =20 What I want to do is to use IPv6 for the lan (like = telnet/imap/smb/smb-pdc/etc... ), and connect the lan to the internet = with the linux server. So, the first problem i see is how i setup the clients/server so they = use IPv6 for all services (if this is possible ....) The second problem is to configure the linux server so it uses the = normal connection for IPv4 and the tunnel when using IPv6.=20 Thanks in advance, Kim ------=_NextPart_000_0732_01C016C8.83CE75B0 Content-Type: text/html; charset="iso-8859-1" Content-Transfer-Encoding: quoted-printable
Hello all,
 
I was wondering if it is possible to = use IPv6 as=20 the default protocol for a lan. For the moment i have a linux server, = which is=20 connected to the internet with a cable modem, and connected to a hub = with=20 another nic. There also are some other clients connected to the hub = (FreeBSD,=20 Win95, Win98 and 2 WinNT4 clients).
 
What I want to do is to use IPv6 for = the lan=20 (like telnet/imap/smb/smb-pdc/etc... ), and connect the lan to the = internet with=20 the linux server.
 
So, the first problem i see is how i = setup the=20 clients/server so they use IPv6 for all services (if this is possible=20 ....)
The second problem is to configure the linux server = so it uses=20 the normal connection for IPv4 and the tunnel when using IPv6. =
 
Thanks in advance,
Kim
------=_NextPart_000_0732_01C016C8.83CE75B0-- From feico@pasta.cs.uit.no Mon Sep 4 23:12:32 2000 From: feico@pasta.cs.uit.no (Feico Dillema) Date: Tue, 5 Sep 2000 00:12:32 +0200 Subject: Now that I am attached to 6bone.... In-Reply-To: ; from bwoods2@mail.gplsucks.org on Mon, Sep 04, 2000 at 08:11:36AM -0700 References: Message-ID: <20000905001232.C1394@dillema.net> On Mon, Sep 04, 2000 at 08:11:36AM -0700, William Woods wrote: > > 1) Now what ?? I mean , is there a ipv6 compat browser avaliable for > FreeBSD? On our IPv6-net we use netscape and the wwwoffle-proxy (with v6 support) on the same machine for Web-browsing over IPv6. I wrote the IPv6 patch for wwwoffle which is available through the NetBSD pkgsrc system (and maybe also in the kame pkgsrc and ports distribution) and you can find it on our WWW-site (slightly outdated though) here: http://www.vermicelli.pasta.cs.uit.no/ipv6/software.html > 2) I know this thing is experamental but is there like a list of sites and > ways to help out? These's at least one at www.ipv6.org. One example si our server which offers most of its services (WWW, ftp, some mirrors, anoncvs, ...) over IPv6, check out: http://www.pasta.cs.uit.no and for a list of services: http://www.pasta.cs.uit.no/Pasta/virtual.html Feico. From rrockell@sprint.net Tue Sep 5 01:26:48 2000 From: rrockell@sprint.net (Robert J. Rockell) Date: Mon, 4 Sep 2000 20:26:48 -0400 (EDT) Subject: Connetion to 6bone question In-Reply-To: <20000903195519.51398.qmail@muzi.com> Message-ID: I can give you a tunnel if you like. Just send me your IPv4 tunnel endpoint, and an ASN if you want to run BGP4+, and I'll set you up. Also, give me a dns server IP address to delegate your ipv6 zone to. Thanks Rob Rockell Sprintlink Internet Service Center Operations Engineering, 703-689-6322 1-800-724-3329, PIN 385-8833 When I was a child I had a fever; my hands felt just like two balloons. On Mon, 4 Sep 2000, Li Hong wrote: ->Hi, all, -> -> I am new here. I have one question how to connect one standalone host to 6bone? (the host in Freebsd 4.1). -> -> I have read the document of "How to join the 6bone" in 6bone.net, how can I find a point to attach to? (My host in siue.edu). -> -> Thanks forward for all your kind help. -> -> Hong -> ->-- ->_______________________________________________ ->Get your free email from http://mail.muzi.com ->Powered by Outblaze -> From sumikawa@ebina.hitachi.co.jp Tue Sep 5 01:27:52 2000 From: sumikawa@ebina.hitachi.co.jp (sumikawa@ebina.hitachi.co.jp) Date: Tue, 05 Sep 2000 09:27:52 +0900 (JST) Subject: Now that I am attached to 6bone.... In-Reply-To: <20000905.034917.74742782.ume@mahoroba.org> References: <20000905.034917.74742782.ume@mahoroba.org> Message-ID: <20000905092752M.sumikawa@ebina.hitachi.co.jp> ume> Lynx 2.8.4dev.7 is IPv6 ready. But, it seems not enabled in ume> ports/www/lynx-current. Try this patch. It will be merged in ports-current on FreeBSD. --- Munechika SUMIKAWA @ Hitachi, Ltd. / KAME Project / FreeBSD.org Index: Makefile =================================================================== RCS file: /home/ncvs/ports/www/lynx-current/Makefile,v retrieving revision 1.119 diff -u -r1.119 Makefile --- Makefile 2000/08/20 20:22:31 1.119 +++ Makefile 2000/09/04 07:05:24 @@ -6,10 +6,10 @@ # PORTNAME= lynx -PORTVERSION= 2.8.4d7 -CATEGORIES= www +PORTVERSION= 2.8.4d9 +CATEGORIES= www ipv6 MASTER_SITES= http://lynx.isc.org/current/ -DISTNAME= ${PORTNAME}2.8.4dev.7 +DISTNAME= ${PORTNAME}2.8.4dev.9 MAINTAINER= ache@FreeBSD.org @@ -22,6 +22,14 @@ CONFIGURE_ARGS= --with-screen=ncurses --with-zlib --libdir="${L_LIB}" \ --enable-nsl-fork --enable-persistent-cookies \ --enable-nls + +.include + +.if ${OSVERSION} >= 400014 +CONFIGURE_ARGS+=--enable-ipv6 +.else +CONFIGURE_ARGS+=--disable-ipv6 +.endif CONFIGURE_ENV= CC="${CC} -I${LOCALBASE}/include" LDFLAGS=-L${LOCALBASE}/lib MAKE_FLAGS= helpdir=${L_HELP} docdir=${L_DOC} -f MAKEFILE= makefile @@ -37,4 +45,4 @@ ${CHOWN} -R ${SHAREOWN}:${SHAREGRP} ${L_HELP} ${CHOWN} ${SHAREOWN}:${SHAREGRP} ${L_LIB}/lynx.cfg -.include +.include Index: files/md5 =================================================================== RCS file: /home/ncvs/ports/www/lynx-current/files/md5,v retrieving revision 1.152 diff -u -r1.152 md5 --- files/md5 2000/08/20 20:22:34 1.152 +++ files/md5 2000/09/04 07:05:24 @@ -1 +1 @@ -MD5 (lynx2.8.4dev.7.tar.bz2) = bb44496c4ba2d90958a0548054c8b529 +MD5 (lynx2.8.4dev.9.tar.bz2) = d8863a4c212f8dd61f63db1adafaebb8 Index: patches/patch-ab =================================================================== RCS file: patch-ab diff -N patch-ab --- /dev/null Mon Sep 4 16:05:19 2000 +++ patch-ab Mon Sep 4 16:05:24 2000 @@ -0,0 +1,61 @@ +--- WWW/Library/Implementation/www_tcp.h.orig Fri Aug 25 10:30:11 2000 ++++ WWW/Library/Implementation/www_tcp.h Mon Sep 4 11:03:13 2000 +@@ -56,29 +56,6 @@ + #define INVSOC (-1) /* Unix invalid socket */ + /* NB: newer libwww has something different for Windows */ + +-/* IPv6 support */ +-#if defined(HAVE_GETADDRINFO) && defined(HAVE_GAI_STRERROR) && defined(ENABLE_IPV6) +-# define INET6 +-#endif /* HAVE_GETADDRINFO && HAVE_GAI_STRERROR && ENABLE_IPV6 */ +- +-#if !defined(__MINGW32__) +-#ifdef INET6 +-typedef struct sockaddr_storage SockA; /* See netinet/in.h */ +-#else +-typedef struct sockaddr_in SockA; /* See netinet/in.h */ +-#endif /* INET6 */ +-#endif +- +-#ifdef INET6 +-#ifdef SIN6_LEN +-#define SOCKADDR_LEN(soc_address) ((struct sockaddr *)&soc_address)->sa_len +-#else +-#define SOCKADDR_LEN(soc_address) SA_LEN((struct sockaddr *)&soc_address) +-#endif /* SIN6_LEN */ +-#else +-#define SOCKADDR_LEN(soc_address) sizeof(soc_address) +-#endif /* INET6 */ +- + #ifndef VMS + + #include +@@ -803,5 +780,28 @@ + #else + #define set_errno(value) /* we do not know how */ + #endif ++ ++/* IPv6 support */ ++#if defined(HAVE_GETADDRINFO) && defined(HAVE_GAI_STRERROR) && defined(ENABLE_IPV6) ++# define INET6 ++#endif /* HAVE_GETADDRINFO && HAVE_GAI_STRERROR && ENABLE_IPV6 */ ++ ++#if !defined(__MINGW32__) ++#ifdef INET6 ++typedef struct sockaddr_storage SockA; /* See netinet/in.h */ ++#else ++typedef struct sockaddr_in SockA; /* See netinet/in.h */ ++#endif /* INET6 */ ++#endif ++ ++#ifdef INET6 ++#ifdef SIN6_LEN ++#define SOCKADDR_LEN(soc_address) ((struct sockaddr *)&soc_address)->sa_len ++#else ++#define SOCKADDR_LEN(soc_address) SA_LEN((struct sockaddr *)&soc_address) ++#endif /* SIN6_LEN */ ++#else ++#define SOCKADDR_LEN(soc_address) sizeof(soc_address) ++#endif /* INET6 */ + + #endif /* TCP_H */ From andrius@andrius.org Tue Sep 5 08:49:13 2000 From: andrius@andrius.org (Andrius Kasparavicius) Date: Tue, 5 Sep 2000 09:49:13 +0200 (GMT-2) Subject: Now that I am attached to 6bone.... In-Reply-To: Message-ID: On Mon, 4 Sep 2000, William Woods wrote: > 1) Now what ?? I mean , is there a ipv6 compat browser avaliable for > FreeBSD? chimera > 2) I know this thing is experamental but is there like a list of sites and > ways to help out? look at www.6bone.net ------------------------- Kasparavicius Andrius ________________________________________________________________________ http://www.andrius.org ICQ:17701001 tel.: +370 87 25630 nick: Casper AND-RIPE AND-6BONE From kdeugau@deepnet.cx Tue Sep 5 14:26:36 2000 From: kdeugau@deepnet.cx (Kris Deugau) Date: Tue, 05 Sep 2000 09:26:36 -0400 Subject: 6bone list format query- To:, From: and CC: Message-ID: <39B4F48C.B71CC8B0@deepnet.cx> This isn't directly related to the topic of this list, but I've noticed a number of people replying to messages- with the To: field set to whoever sent to original message, and then CC: set to the list. (I've just now realized that my message filters can be set up to handle this.) This means that I end up with a few messages that, in some cases, can't be told apart from spam by looking at subject and sender. Two questions, for list admins and/or members: 1) Should the Subject have a header of some kind automagically added so incoming messages can be quickly identified? Most other mailing lists I'm on have something like this. 2) Should CC's to the list be rejected? (This is minor; I'm curious why a reply to the list instead of the original sender should be desireable or necessary.) -Kris Deugau -- If a man were beset by green demons, and took his problem to the church, a priest would pray for the sickness in his soul. If he took his problem to the doctor, a psychiatrist would probe for the sickness in his mind. But only a consulting philosopher would pick up a stick and help him chase the demons. From jameso@elwood.net Tue Sep 5 15:41:05 2000 From: jameso@elwood.net (Jim) Date: Tue, 5 Sep 2000 09:41:05 -0500 Subject: IPv6 and NAT In-Reply-To: <39B2B3CA.57A2F6F@mediaone.net>; from squaint@mediaone.net on Sun, Sep 03, 2000 at 04:25:46PM -0400 References: <39B2B3CA.57A2F6F@mediaone.net> Message-ID: <20000905094105.A26461@elwood.net> I wrote a article describing how to use IPv6 behind a NAT. It is wrote for BSD, but it should help you at well. You can see it in the latest issue of Daemon News (http://www.daemonnews.org/) at http://www.daemonnews.org/200009/ipv6.html. Good luck. On Sun, Sep 03, 2000 at 04:25:46PM -0400, Sean Quaint wrote: > Hello, > > I have a linux box ipchains to hide a couple hosts behind a cable > modem. It runs only IPv4. One of my private hosts is a Solaris 8 sparc > with IPv6 enabled. I've run the perl script from freenet6.net, and have > now the following ip setup: > > # ifconfig -a > le0: flags=1000843 mtu 1500 index 2 > inet 192.168.100.11 netmask ffffff00 broadcast 192.168.100.255 ether > 8:0:20:76:78:69 > le0: flags=2000841 mtu 1500 index 2 ether > 8:0:20:76:78:69 inet6 fe80::a00:20ff:fe76:7869/10 > ip.tun0: flags=2200850 mtu > 1480 index 3 inet tunnel src 24.30.58.147 inet6 fe80::181e:3a93/10 --> > fe80::ce7b:1f66 > ip.tun0:1: flags=2200850 mtu > 1480 index 3 inet6 3ffe:b00:c18:1fff::65b/128 --> 3ffe:b00:c18:1fff::65a > > ip.tun0:2: flags=2200850 mtu > 1480 index 3 inet6 3ffe:b00:c18:1fff::65b/128 --> 3ffe:b00:c18:1fff::65a > > and my routing tables are: > > # netstat -rn > > Routing Table: IPv4 > Destination Gateway Flags Ref Use Interface > -------------------- -------------------- ----- ----- ------ --------- > 192.168.100.0 192.168.100.11 U 1 6 le0 > 224.0.0.0 192.168.100.11 U 1 0 le0 > default 192.168.100.2 UG 1 184 > 127.0.0.1 127.0.0.1 UH 6 28863 lo0 > > Routing Table: IPv6 > Destination/Mask Gateway Flags Ref > Use If > --------------------------- --------------------------- ----- --- ------ > ----- > fe80::/10 fe80::a00:20ff:fe76:7869 U 1 0 > le0 > ff00::/8 fe80::a00:20ff:fe76:7869 U 1 0 > le0 > default fe80::a00:20ff:fe76:7869 U 1 17 > le0 > default 3ffe:b00:c18:1fff::65a UG 1 0 > > ::1 ::1 UH 1 0 > lo0 > > > Now when I try to ping an IPv6 addr, I get no route to host: > # ping -A inet6 ftp.ring.gr.jp > ICMPv6 Address Unreachable from gateway fe80::a00:20ff:fe76:7869 > for icmp6 from fe80::a00:20ff:fe76:7869 to 2001:240:3:2::1 > > I'm sure the NAT configuration has something to do with this. But I'm > not sure what to do about it. > > Thanks in advance, > > Sean Quaint > > -- Jim O'Gorman | Captain Hook died of jock itch. UNIX Admin | ---- | jameso@elwood.net | jameso@class.com | From Terry" I now have a tunnel to the 6bone and site prefix - I could use some information on creating the right 6bone registry objects for my site. e.g. which objects do I need to create ? So far I created a person object for me : TJM1-6BONE and I guess the next one I need is an IPV6-SITE object. I have one question with this - what should I use as a site identifier in the IPV6-SITE: field anything ? or is there some standard naming system I should follow ? Thanks Terry Moore-Read From fink@es.net Tue Sep 5 18:35:38 2000 From: fink@es.net (Bob Fink) Date: Tue, 05 Sep 2000 10:35:38 -0700 Subject: 6bone registry In-Reply-To: <019201c01755$55c1d800$0200000a@moorecomputersolutions.com> Message-ID: <4.3.1.2.20000905103430.03c461c0@imap2.es.net> At 09:21 AM 9/5/2000 -0700, Terry wrote: >I now have a tunnel to the 6bone and site prefix - I could use some >information on creating the right 6bone registry objects for my site. e.g. >which objects do I need to create ? > >So far I created a person object for me : TJM1-6BONE and I guess the next >one I need is an IPV6-SITE object. I have one question with this - what >should I use as a site identifier in the IPV6-SITE: field anything ? or is >there some standard naming system I should follow ? An IPv6-site object should be named something representative of the site, network or organizations that owns/is-responsible-for the object. Bob From gphillips@clarkie.net Wed Sep 6 01:19:40 2000 From: gphillips@clarkie.net (Geoff) Date: Tue, 05 Sep 2000 20:19:40 -0400 Subject: IPv6 on 98 Message-ID: <4.3.2.7.0.20000905195920.00a99660@mail.clarkie.org> Hello, I'd like to try IPv6 out and try to help where I can but right now all I have is a Win98 box but I haven't seen that a poor college student can afford (I'm looking for GNU/copyleft or free :) ). I'm also looking for something for BeOS. I think I can take care of finding something for my Linux/FreeBSD boxes once I get them up here. Thank you, Geoff From hswu@ns.6test.edu.cn Thu Sep 7 08:35:00 2000 From: hswu@ns.6test.edu.cn (Haisang Wu) Date: Thu, 7 Sep 2000 15:35:00 +0800 (CST) Subject: IPv6 on 98 In-Reply-To: <4.3.2.7.0.20000905195920.00a99660@mail.clarkie.org> from Geoff at "Sep 5, 2000 8:19:40 pm" Message-ID: <200009070735.PAA04195@ns.6test.edu.cn> hi At present Microsoft has released a MSR IPv6 stack, but only for WinNT4.0 and Win2000, not for win98 and win95. It is a good stack. You can find much supporting under *BSD and Linux. Also HPUX and AIX can support IPv6. Best haisang > Hello, > > I'd like to try IPv6 out and try to help where I can but right now all I > have is a Win98 box but I haven't seen that a poor college student can > afford (I'm looking for GNU/copyleft or free :) ). I'm also looking for > something for BeOS. > > I think I can take care of finding something for my Linux/FreeBSD boxes > once I get them up here. > > > > Thank you, > > Geoff > > From kontogia@cti.gr Thu Sep 7 08:59:52 2000 From: kontogia@cti.gr (Kontogianni Vicky) Date: Thu, 7 Sep 2000 10:59:52 +0300 Subject: Question about BGP4+ Message-ID: <000401c018a1$9a7c42d0$a3818c96@kontogianni> Hello everybody, I have set up a BGP4+ connection with my neighbor and when we check the advertisements that my neighbor receives from my router, we see that the advertising address is the link-local address of my tunnel side (that is FE80:....). Shouldn't it be the Glocal unicast address (3FFE:...)?? Thanks in advance for the responses, Vicky Kontogianni Network Technologies Sector Computer Technology Institute PATRAS-GREECE Tel. 061 - 960377 e-mail: kontogia@cti.gr From xavier@euro.net Thu Sep 7 13:42:45 2000 From: xavier@euro.net (Xavier Mertens) Date: Thu, 7 Sep 2000 14:42:45 +0200 (MET DST) Subject: Question about BGP4+ In-Reply-To: <000401c018a1$9a7c42d0$a3818c96@kontogianni> Message-ID: Vicky, Do you use a Cisco router ? In this case, be sure to upgrade to the laster IPv6 IOS release! We had problem setting up BGP4+ sessions. The upgrade fixed all our problems! X -- Xavier Mertens, . . EuroNet Internet "Contrary to popular belief, NOC Manager . * a subsidiary of Unix is userfriendly. It XM3-RIPE XM1-6BONE . France Telecom just happens to be selective about who it makes friends with." On Thu, 7 Sep 2000, Kontogianni Vicky wrote: > Hello everybody, > > I have set up a BGP4+ connection with my neighbor and when we check the > advertisements that my neighbor receives from my router, we see that the > advertising address is the link-local address of my tunnel side (that is > FE80:....). Shouldn't it be the Glocal unicast address (3FFE:...)?? > > Thanks in advance for the responses, > > > Vicky Kontogianni > Network Technologies Sector > Computer Technology Institute > PATRAS-GREECE > > Tel. 061 - 960377 > e-mail: kontogia@cti.gr > From brian@hursley.ibm.com Thu Sep 7 17:08:33 2000 From: brian@hursley.ibm.com (Brian E Carpenter) Date: Thu, 07 Sep 2000 11:08:33 -0500 Subject: IPv6 "Subnetting" Document References: Message-ID: <39B7BD81.310E2BB0@hursley.ibm.com> George, Why is it any different (in principle) from subnetting an IPv4 site using variable length subnet masks? Under a /48 prefix you have 16 bits to use as you wish for subnet structure. My advice would be to be conservative with the bits - i.e. go for a flat rather than a hierarchical allocation model. I've switched this to the 6bone list where you will find the most experienced deployers. Brian > George Rivera wrote: > > IPv6 folks: > > I'm looking for an IPv6 addressing document which explains the actual IPv6 "subnetting" process used to subdivide IPv6 > addresses into multiple "subnets" within a customer IP network. > > Please advise... > > George A. Rivera, Network Consultant > Nortel Networks > Global Professional Services (GPS) > 4401 Great America Parkway > Santa Clara, CA. 95052 > Cell 714.240.0305 > Office 408.495.3512 From jef.seghers@pandora.be Thu Sep 7 17:12:36 2000 From: jef.seghers@pandora.be (Jef Seghers) Date: Thu, 7 Sep 2000 18:12:36 +0200 Subject: IPv6 Enabled browers Message-ID: Hello all, is it possible to IPv6-enable Internet Explorer 5.5? thx, Jef Seghers From fink@es.net Thu Sep 7 17:37:13 2000 From: fink@es.net (Bob Fink) Date: Thu, 07 Sep 2000 09:37:13 -0700 Subject: pTLA for BELNET-BE closes on 21Sep00 Message-ID: <4.3.1.2.20000907093252.027cf5c8@imap2.es.net> BELNET-BE requests a pTLA. This opens a two week review period, so please send any comments to me or the 6bone list. This review period closes on 21 Sep 2000. Thanks, Bob === >Date: Thu, 7 Sep 2000 17:57:11 +0200 (MET DST) >From: Marc Roger >To: Bob Fink >cc: ipv6@belnet.be >Subject: Re: IPv6 pTLA application > >Bob, ... >Please find our answers below. > >rfc2772> 1. The pTLA Applicant must have a minimum of three (3) months >rfc2772> qualifying experience as a 6Bone end-site or pNLA >transit. During >rfc2772> the entire qualifying period the Applicant must be operationally >rfc2772> providing the following: > >Our 6bone connectivity is operationnal since january 2000. > >rfc2772> a. Fully maintained, up to date, 6Bone Registry entries for >their >rfc2772> ipv6-site inet6num, mntner, and person objects, including >each >rfc2772> tunnel that the Applicant has. > >We do maintain up-to-date ipv6-site (BELNET-BE), inet6num (3FFE:608:2::/48), >mnter (MNT-BELNET) and person (MR105-RIPE) objects, it includes all tunnels >we currently have. > >rfc2772> b. Fully maintained, and reliable, BGP4+ peering and >connectivity >rfc2772> between the Applicant's boundary router and the appropriate >rfc2772> connection point into the 6Bone. This router must be IPv6 >rfc2772> pingable. This criteria is judged by members of the 6Bone >rfc2772> Operations Group at the time of the Applicant's pTLA request. > >We maintain BGP4+ peering with SURFnet (AS1103) a.o. This information can be >verified from our looking glass at http://www.belnet.be/cgi-bin/lg > >rfc2772> c. Fully maintained DNS forward (AAAA) and reverse (ip6.int) >rfc2772> entries for the Applicant's router(s) and at least one host >rfc2772> system. > >For instance: >% dig vivaldi6.ipv6.belnet.be aaaa >... >vivaldi6.ipv6.belnet.be. 15M IN AAAA 3ffe:608:2:1::2 >... > >% >dig >2.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.1.0.0.0.2.0.0.0.8.0.6.0.e.f.f.3.ip6.int ptr >... >2.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.1.0.0.0.2.0.0.0.8.0.6.0.e.f.f.3.ip6.int. >1D IN PTR vivaldi6.ipv6.belnet.be. >... > >rfc2772> d. A fully maintained, and reliable, IPv6-accessible system >rfc2772> providing, at a mimimum, one or more web pages, >describing the >rfc2772> Applicant's IPv6 services. This server must be IPv6 >pingable. > >This page can be found under http://vivaldi.belnet.be/ (also as >http://www.ipv6.belnet.be/ipv6/, >the address 3ffe:608:2:1::2 is pingable. > >rfc2772> 2. The pTLA Applicant MUST have the ability and intent to provide >rfc2772> "production-quality" 6Bone backbone service. Applicants must >rfc2772> provide a statement and information in support of this claim. >rfc2772> This MUST include the following: >rfc2772> > >We do intend to provide production quality IPv6 service to our customers. > >rfc2772> a. A support staff of two persons minimum, three preferable, >with >rfc2772> person attributes registered for each in the ipv6-site object >rfc2772> for the pTLA applicant. > >The composition of the support staff can be obtained by retrieving the >"SST1-RIPE" role object in the RIPE Database. > >rfc2772> b. A common mailbox for support contact purposes that all >support >rfc2772> staff have acess to, pointed to with a notify attribute >in the >rfc2772> ipv6-site object for the pTLA Applicant. > >ipv6@belnet.be is the contact e-mail address. > >rfc2772> 3. The pTLA Applicant MUST have a potential "user community" that >rfc2772> would be served by its becoming a pTLA, e.g., the Applicant is a >rfc2772> major provider of Internet service in a region, country, or >focus >rfc2772> of interest. Applicant must provide a statement and >information in >rfc2772> support this claim. > >BELNET is the national research network. We provide high speed connections >to Universities, research centres, high schools and public >administrations. Our user community is estimated to 100k-200k users. > >More information about BELNET can be found at http://www.belnet.be/ > >rfc2772> 4. The pTLA Applicant MUST commit to abide by the current 6Bone >rfc2772> operational rules and policies as they exist at time of its >rfc2772> application, and agree to abide by future 6Bone backbone >rfc2772> operational rules and policies as they evolve by consensus >of the >rfc2772> 6Bone backbone and user community. > >I do. > >-- >Marc.Roger@belnet.be, BELNET, the National Research Network From Terry" Can somebody point me to a resource on setting up reverse dns for IPV6 ? Thanks Terry Moore-Read From stuart@mfnx.net Thu Sep 7 20:39:11 2000 From: stuart@mfnx.net (Stephen Stuart) Date: Thu, 07 Sep 2000 12:39:11 -0700 Subject: Anyone using BIND v9 out there? Message-ID: <200009071939.e87JdBX98565@hi.tech.org> I've got BIND v9.0.0rc5 running on host rwc.tech.org; in theory, it will take IPv6 requests for DNS queries. If anyone out there has a resolver library that can issue queries to a recursive server via IPv6, I'd be curious to know what happens when you point your resolver at rwc.tech.org's AAAA record. Stephen From crawdad@fnal.gov Thu Sep 7 20:56:27 2000 From: crawdad@fnal.gov (Matt Crawford) Date: Thu, 07 Sep 2000 14:56:27 -0500 Subject: IPV6 reverse DNS In-Reply-To: Your message of Thu, 07 Sep 2000 12:36:35 PDT. <00dc01c01902$ef1c1d40$0200000a@moorecomputersolutions.com> Message-ID: <200009071956.OAA22193@gungnir.fnal.gov> > Can somebody point me to a resource on setting up reverse dns for IPV6 ? RFC 1886 - widely used (relative to v6, anyway) RFC 2874 - new & improved From fink@es.net Thu Sep 7 21:07:31 2000 From: fink@es.net (Bob Fink) Date: Thu, 07 Sep 2000 13:07:31 -0700 Subject: IPV6 reverse DNS In-Reply-To: <00dc01c01902$ef1c1d40$0200000a@moorecomputersolutions.com> Message-ID: <4.3.1.2.20000907130507.0296f008@imap2.es.net> Terry, At 12:36 PM 9/7/2000 -0700, Terry wrote: >Can somebody point me to a resource on setting up reverse dns for IPV6 ? From the "how to join the 6bone" web page: DNS SUPPORT You will need a nameserver that supports IPv6 AAAA records. The IPv6 DNS Setup web pages, written/maintained by Yuji Sekiya (ISI) and Bertrand Buclin (AT&T Labs Europe), shows how to setup for IPv6 in an existing IPv4 DNS server. Note that you will need a secondary that also supports AAAA records. Reverse mappings for IPv6 are done under the ip6.int delegation. Contact Bill Manning at bmanning@isi.edu as he is responsible for setting it up. Also, see Bill's comments on this. Bob From cfp@jp.ipv6forum.com Sat Sep 9 07:18:53 2000 From: cfp@jp.ipv6forum.com (Kazu Yamamoto (=?iso-2022-jp?B?GyRCOzNLXE9CSScbKEI=?=)) Date: Sat, 09 Sep 2000 15:18:53 +0900 (JST) Subject: The Global IPv6 Summit in Japan Message-ID: <20000909.151853.74665794.kazu@Mew.org> # This is the third try since the previously posted message have not # delivered. Sorry if you receive duplicated messages. Hello IPv6 folks, "The Global IPv6 Summit in Japan" will be held in the next week of IETF San Diego at Osaka city, Japan. Most presentations/panels are spoken in Japanese but we prepare translators between Japanese and English. So, we would like to call for your participation. Also you have a chance to appeal your IPv6 business in a session. We would also like to call for your presentations. // Steering Group of the Global IPv6 Summit in Japan ---- Call for participation and presentations for "the Global IPv6 Summit in Japan" <> The Global IPv6 Summit, under the organization of the IPv6 Forum, is held regularly around the world to accelerate the deployment of IPv6. We are happy to announce that this conference will be held in Japan, one of the leading countries in the areas of IPv6 development and deployment. The Internet is built on the foundations of the Internet Protocol (IP). The current version of IP is named IPv4 after its version number. The total number of devices that IPv4 can identify is limited to about 4.3 billion. It's hard to see the Internet becoming the foundation of a true, universal communications infrastructure when this number is compared to the human population. In fact, it is expected that the entire address space of IPv4 will be exhausted by around 2008. So, address assignment/allocation is currently being carried out under a very restrictive policy. NAT (Network Address Translator) was introduced as a temporary solution, resulting in the loss of some of the original functionality of the Internet. The principles of the Internet are end-to-end and bidirectional communication. This means every node can communicate with every other freely without any restrictions caused by intermediate nodes. Since NAT broke these principles, it became difficult for unexpected novel applications to appear in the current environment of the Internet. To resolve the exhaustion of IP addresses, extending its address space is a straightforward solution. IPv6, the next generation of IP, provides a huge number of IP addresses and makes NAT obsolete allowing the Internet to recover its original principles. IPv6 is a paradigm recovery for applications. After deploying IPv6 and recovering end-to-end/bidirectional communication, we cannot imagine what kind of applications will appear. This conference will introduce the current deployment status of IPv6 throughout the world. Also, panel discussions are planned, both on "How IPv6 will Change Business" and on "Case Studies: Making the Change to IPv6". Getting Internet people together, including those who are involved in IPv6 activities and IPv4 business and management, we intend to discuss the future of Internet business and the direction of engineering. This conference will be beneficial for everyone including, but not limited to, engineers, researchers, network managers and business people. We would like to invite each of you to participate. <> Steering Group of the Global IPv6 Summit in Japan (Contact: info@jp.ipv6forum.com) <> Date: December 18 - 19, 2000 (As a part of Internet Week 2000) Venue: Grand Cube Osaka (Osaka International Convention Center) 5-3-51, Nakanoshima, Kita-ku, Osaka 530-0005, JAPAN Phone: +81-6-4803-5555 Fax: +81-6-4803-5620 E-mail: soumu@gco.co.jp http://www.gco.co.jp/index.html (The same place as Internet Week 2000) <> Early registration Regular/ discount On-site registration (until Oct 31) Non-student 10,000 JPY 15,000 JPY Student 2,000 JPY 2,000 JPY Non-student 5,000 JPY Student 3,000 JPY <> December 18 (Mon) Keynote Speech 1: Dr. Jun Murai, WIDE Project Session 1: Business report on IPv6 in Japan Session 2: Status report from Asian countries Session 3: Panel on how IPv6 will change business Reception December 19 (Tue) Keynote Speech 2: Dr. Steve Deering, Cisco Systems Session 4: Business report on IPv6 around the world Session 5: Case Studies: Making the Change to IPv6 <> This conference will be held as a part of Internet Week 2000. Please refer to the following page for registration: http://www.jp.ipv6forum.com/ <> The program committee calls for presentation proposal for "Session 4: Business report of IPv6 around the world". Candidates are sTLA holders and IPv6 vendors. Please propose a "10 minutes" presentation on your IPv6 business. If you would like to give a presentation, please send an e-mail message in the following form. Please note that we may not accept all proposals due to the time limitations of the program. Format: See below Deadline: September 30, 2000 Notification date: October 6, 2000 To: cfp@jp.ipv6forum.com Subject: presentation proposal Name : Title : Email : Telephone number: Organization : Department : Your proposal in plain text (no more than 250 words) explaining as concretely as possible your point of view and what kind of presentation can be expected. ---- From ji@research.att.com Sun Sep 10 22:01:53 2000 From: ji@research.att.com (ji@research.att.com) Date: Sun, 10 Sep 2000 17:01:53 -0400 (EDT) Subject: ipv6 IRC servers? Message-ID: <200009102101.RAA15586@bual.research.att.com> Are there any, preferably (also) connected to the EFNET servers? /ji From aaronw@golden.net Mon Sep 11 01:46:19 2000 From: aaronw@golden.net (aaronw@golden.net) Date: Sun, 10 Sep 2000 20:46:19 -0400 (EDT) Subject: ipv6 IRC servers? In-Reply-To: <200009102101.RAA15586@bual.research.att.com> References: <200009102101.RAA15586@bual.research.att.com> Message-ID: <200009110046.UAA27091@mig.golden.net> Quoting ji@research.att.com: > Are there any, preferably (also) connected to the EFNET servers? Not as far as I know. DALnet is in the process of developing IPV6 support into their IRCd, however it requires a complete rewrite of the configuation format due to the fact that the most common config formats uses colons as separators. It also raises issues with the present IRC protocol as it also uses colons as separators. ETA on DALnet's IPV6 support is about 6-8 months away. It *is* all volunteer. :) -Aaron Wiebe Senior Coder, DALnet IRCd Coding Team ----------------------------------------------------- This mail sent via Golden Triangle Web-Mail http://www.golden.net From ryan@continuity.e-boxen.com Mon Sep 11 08:56:11 2000 From: ryan@continuity.e-boxen.com (Ryan Lortie) Date: Mon, 11 Sep 2000 01:56:11 -0600 (MDT) Subject: ipv6 IRC servers? In-Reply-To: <200009102101.RAA15586@bual.research.att.com> Message-ID: On Sun, 10 Sep 2000 ji@research.att.com wrote: > Are there any, preferably (also) connected to the EFNET servers? > > /ji > Well, we're not connected to EFNet, but just started running a server (irc.paradisec.ca) .. today, actually. It only allows connections from 6bone folks (no ipv4 connectivity) and has almost no users for the time being (as it was just started today) but maybe we can get something going here *shrugs* Ryan From tkuiper@tobit.com Mon Sep 11 11:38:53 2000 From: tkuiper@tobit.com (tkuiper@tobit.com) Date: 11 Sep 2000 10:38:53 UT Subject: ipv6 IRC servers? Message-ID: <00219BFF.39BCD25A@mail.tobit.com> IRCnet (big european net) has those v6 servers: eu.irc6.net eu-de.irc6.net eu-fi.irc6.net be.irc6.net it.irc6.net Best Regards, Thomas -------- Original Message -------- Subject: Re: ipv6 IRC servers? (11-Sep-2000 12:29) From: ryan@continuity.e-boxen.com To: tkuiper@tobit.com > > > On Sun, 10 Sep 2000 ji@research.att.com wrote: > > > Are there any, preferably (also) connected to the EFNET servers? > > > > /ji > > > Well, we're not connected to EFNet, but just started running a > server(irc.paradisec.ca) .. today, actually. > > It only allows connections from 6bone folks (no ipv4 connectivity) and > hasalmost no users for the time being (as it was just started today) > butmaybe we can get something going here *shrugs* > > Ryan From marc@belnet.be Mon Sep 11 12:48:12 2000 From: marc@belnet.be (Marc Roger) Date: Mon, 11 Sep 2000 13:48:12 +0200 (MEST) Subject: [6bone] ipv6 IRC servers? In-Reply-To: <200009102101.RAA15586@bual.research.att.com> Message-ID: On Sun, 10 Sep 2000 ji@research.att.com wrote: > Are there any, preferably (also) connected to the EFNET servers? There are quite a few IPv6-aware irc servers on the IRCnet network. For instance irc.belnet.be [3ffe:608:2:1::2], eu.irc6.et [3ffe:2610:1:ff10::2], or irc.missingU.com [3ffe:2900:e002:0:250:b7ff:fe14:6155] BitchX (http://www.bitchx.com/) is an IPv6-aware irc client. -- Marc.Roger@belnet.be, BELNET From fd@telia.net Mon Sep 11 14:23:32 2000 From: fd@telia.net (Fredrik Dahlberg) Date: Mon, 11 Sep 2000 15:23:32 +0200 (CEST) Subject: [6bone] ipv6 IRC servers? In-Reply-To: Message-ID: On Mon, 11 Sep 2000, Marc Roger wrote: > BitchX (http://www.bitchx.com/) is an IPv6-aware irc client. Late versions of ircII 4.4 has IPv6 support and work well with it. No need to run BitchX. ;) From gphillips@clarkie.net Mon Sep 11 17:57:20 2000 From: gphillips@clarkie.net (Geoff) Date: Mon, 11 Sep 2000 12:57:20 -0400 Subject: books and rfcs Message-ID: <4.3.2.7.0.20000911124817.00aa8500@mail.clarkie.org> Hello, I need to do some research on IPv6 for one of my classes. I was wondering if someone can tell me which are the current RFC/FYI as well as suggest some good books (technical, academic, advanced, intermediate, journals, etc). It's up to my professor what he will make me do with the knowledge I learn it could range from a paper to a program. So I need to be ready for almost anything. Thank you, and thank you for the help on Win98 and IPv6 (it looks like I need to pick on my linux/FBSD box asap) Geoff From fink@es.net Tue Sep 12 21:55:51 2000 From: fink@es.net (Bob Fink) Date: Tue, 12 Sep 2000 13:55:51 -0700 Subject: Fwd: Stealth, pTLA request. Message-ID: <4.3.1.2.20000912135039.06d91d70@imap2.es.net> STEALTH requests a pTLA. I am waving the 3 month review period (Stealth has about 1.5 months on the 6bone) due to the recommendation of Rob Rockell of SPRINT. This opens a two week review period, so please send any comments to the me or the 6bone list. This review period closes on 26 Sep 2000. Thanks, Bob >Date: Tue, 12 Sep 2000 14:25:29 -0400 >From: Shrihari Pandit >To: fink@es.net >Cc: rrockell@sprint.net >Subject: Stealth, pTLA request. >User-Agent: Mutt/1.2.5i > >Dear Bob Fink, > > This is Shrihari Pandit of Stealth Communications, Inc. Stealth is >aggressively pushing development and introduction of IPv6 to its customers >and users of the Internet. > > We are requesting pTLA status on 6bone, earlier then the 3 months > required >membership of 6bone. We hope to meet 6bone's requirements, any issues let me >know. > >Kind Regards, > >Shrihari Pandit >Stealth Communications, Inc. > >--- > >The following rules apply to qualify for a 6Bone pTLA allocation. It >should be recognized that holders of 6Bone pTLA allocations are expected >to provide production quality backbone network services for the 6Bone. > > 1. The pTLA Applicant must have a minimum of three (3) months > qualifying experience as a 6Bone end-site or pNLA transit. > During the entire qualifying period the Applicant must be > operationally providing the following: > > --> Our ipv6-site is operational since July 6th 2000. > > a. Fully maintained, up to date, 6Bone Registry entries for their > ipv6-site inet6num, mntner, and person objects, including each > tunnel that the Applicant has. > > --> We fully maintain, up to date, 6bone registry entries. > --> See: > --> ipv6-site: STEALTH > --> inet6num: 3FFE:2900:E002::/48 > --> mntner: MAINT-AS8002 > --> person: SP5-6BONE > > b. Fully maintained, and reliable, BGP4+ peering and connectivity > between the Applicant's boundary router and the appropriate > connection point into the 6Bone. This router must be IPv6 > pingable. This criteria is judged by members of the 6Bone > Operations Group at the time of the Applicant's pTLA request. > > --> Our primary connection into 6bone is via Sprint/AS6175, > --> running BGP4+. > --> Link IP (Stealth Sprint): 3ffe:2900:e:2::2 3ffe:2900:e:2::1 > > c. Fully maintained DNS forward (AAAA) and reverse (ip6.int) > entries for the Applicant's router(s) and at least one host > system. > > --> We maintain DNS forward (AAAA) and reverse (ip6.int) entries > --> on auth01.stealth.net & auth02.stealth.net. > > d. A fully maintained, and reliable, IPv6-accessible system > providing, at a mimimum, one or more web pages, describing the > Applicant's IPv6 services. This server must be IPv6 pingable. > > --> List of IPv6 services is located in ipv6-site "STEALTH" object. > > --> Complete list of IPv6 applications are located bottom of this > --> email, please do not redistribute to mailing-list. > > 2. The pTLA Applicant MUST have the ability and intent to provide > "production-quality" 6Bone backbone service. Applicants must > provide a statement and information in support of this claim. > This MUST include the following: > > a. A support staff of two persons minimum, three preferable, with > person attributes registered for each in the ipv6-site object > for the pTLA applicant. > > b. A common mailbox for support contact purposes that all support > staff have acess to, pointed to with a notify attribute in the > ipv6-site object for the pTLA Applicant. > > --> Our objectives are to provide production quality IPv6 service. > --> Stealth's regional backbone is almost native IPv6 now, and is > --> providing native IPv6 links (T1 to T3) to customers. We are > --> also actively developing dozens of applications for the public. > --> (See Stealth IPv6 applications, towards end of e-mail). > > --> Support staff members: SP5-6BONE, VIHA1-6BONE > --> Common mailbox for support: ipv6@stealth.net, support@stealth.net > > 3. The pTLA Applicant MUST have a potential "user community" that > would be served by its becoming a pTLA, e.g., the Applicant is a > major provider of Internet service in a region, country, or > focus of interest. Applicant must provide a statement and > information in support this claim. > > --> Stealth Communications, Inc. is a commerical provider of > --> high-speed, dedicated Internet access. > > --> We serve customers in many sectors. They includes: > --> Research institutions, Public & Private Schools and Universities > --> Small to large profit/non-profit, ISP's, Content providers, > --> Stock Exchanges, Telephone operators, and more. > > > 4. The pTLA Applicant MUST commit to abide by the current 6Bone > operational rules and policies as they exist at time of its > application, and agree to abide by future 6Bone backbone > operational rules and policies as they evolve by consensus of the > 6Bone backbone and user community. > > --> We agree. > > >Thank you for your time, > > >Kind Regards, > >Shrihari Pandit >Stealth Communications, Inc. > >------------------------------------------------------------------------- >IPv6 Planned Services at Stealth Communications, Inc. >------------------------------------------------------------------------- > >Deployment (weeks) :: Type of service. > >* Standard services accessible to everybody: >0 + ping :: A traditional latency-test for IPv6 participants. >Now + www :: Company and customer homepages served via IPv6. > > >* Services open to the public: >Now + irc :: Access to a global IPv4 IRC-network via IPv6. >2 + ntp :: A public time-service offered via IPv6. >3 + ftp :: A comprehensive FTP-site accessible via IPv6. >2 + lg :: A looking-glass offering sight into the IPv6 world. >2 + smtp-bounce :: A list-bot for people testing their IPv6 >mail-setup. >1 + fortune :: Quote of the day, UNIX-style via telnet. >3 + rwhois :: Access to our IPv6 rwhois-records. >Now + missingU.com :: Online Postcards, Diary, Stories/Poems and more! > > >* Services available free of charge after $0 registration: > >6 + emul-serv :: Unlimited access to virtual platforms running >ancient OS'es. >4 + tunnel-serv :: Very flexible dynamic and static tunnels for >end-users. >2 + proxy-serv :: Access to v4<->v6 connection-forwarding for WWW. >2 + nntp :: Unlimited (read-only) news-service. >8 + dialup :: Unlimited access to IPv6 via our dialup-spool. >? + shell-serv :: Account on an IPv6-only UNIX-server with >www6-hosting. >2 + zork-game :: Zork/Dungeon (Infocom), a classical >text-adventure via Telnet. > > >> Possibly also other games (choose via a menu?) > >> Access to a Telnet IRC-client via IPv6 (via menu?) > >* Services available to customers only: >Now + ipv6 :: Full IPv6 networking upon routinely accepted >request. > > >--- > >Some background information on Stealth's network: > http://traffic.stealth.net > http://traffic.stealth.net (Outdated, but shows Stealth's SONET network) > >--- > >Delivered-To: digital@stealth.net >Content-Type: TEXT/PLAIN; charset=US-ASCII >Approved-By: Francois Baligant >Message-ID: >Date: Wed, 23 Aug 2000 01:51:41 +0200 >Reply-To: Francois Baligant >Sender: IRCnet opers mailing-list >From: Francois Baligant >Subject: [OPERS] First Transatlantic IPv6 link > > Hi, > > Im very pleased to announce you that tonight the > first IPv6 ircd server-to-server link was established > between Stealth Communications, Inc. (NYC) and Wanadoo > Belgium NV/SA. (ircd.stealth.net <-> ircd.wanadoo.be) > > A direct IPv6 peering was established between Stealth > and Wanadoo using an IPv6-over-v4 tunnel. > > The 2 hubs connected without any problems. > > I would like here to thanks all the people that worked > so hard on our ircd's IPv6 support. Our ircd is one > of the first to be really IPv6-ready and we have to > be proud of that. > > Now looks like a good time to experiment with IPv6, so > go ahead and let's move this net into the next millenium :-) > > Regards, > Francois aka aXs > >Francois Baligant * * Wanadoo Belgium NV/SA >Network Operation Center * * a subsidiary of France Telecom > * Lozenberg 22 - B-1932 Zaventem >FB1-6BONE * tel: +32 2 717 17 17 >francois@be.wanadoo.com fax: +32 2 717 17 77 > >--- From fink@es.net Wed Sep 13 01:12:50 2000 From: fink@es.net (Bob Fink) Date: Tue, 12 Sep 2000 17:12:50 -0700 Subject: 6bone pTLA 3FFE:80A0::/28 assigned to Berkom Message-ID: <4.3.1.2.20000912170833.06638f80@imap2.es.net> 6bone Folk, BERKOM's 2 week review for their pTLA has passed with no comment. I have assigned them the pTLA 3FFE:80A0::/28. Thanks, Bob From david.harmelin@dante.org.uk Wed Sep 13 13:29:43 2000 From: david.harmelin@dante.org.uk (David Harmelin) Date: Wed, 13 Sep 2000 13:29:43 +0100 Subject: IPV6 reverse DNS In-Reply-To: <4.3.1.2.20000907130507.0296f008@imap2.es.net> References: <00dc01c01902$ef1c1d40$0200000a@moorecomputersolutions.com> Message-ID: <4.2.2.20000913132347.00b62500@alpha.dante.org.uk> Dear all, RFC 2874 predicts the replacement of AAAA records (under the ip6.int zone) by A6 records (under the ip6.arpa zone). However, the 6bone DNS reverse delegation seems to only implement the AAAA solution. DANTE and the TEN-155 connected countries in Europe have started implementing the A6 delegation, with a fake root server. Are there any plans on the 6bone to migrate? DH. At 01:07 PM 9/7/00 -0700, Bob Fink wrote: You will need a nameserver that supports IPv6 AAAA records. The IPv6 DNS Setup web ___________________________________________________________________ * * David Harmelin Network Engineer * * DANCERT Representative * Francis House * 112 Hills Road Tel +44 1223 302992 * Cambridge CB2 1PQ Fax +44 1223 303005 D A N T E United Kingdom WWW http://www.dante.net ____________________________________________________________________ From david.harmelin@dante.org.uk Wed Sep 13 15:07:25 2000 From: david.harmelin@dante.org.uk (David Harmelin) Date: Wed, 13 Sep 2000 15:07:25 +0100 Subject: IPV6 reverse DNS In-Reply-To: <4.3.1.2.20000907130507.0296f008@imap2.es.net> References: <00dc01c01902$ef1c1d40$0200000a@moorecomputersolutions.com> Message-ID: <4.2.2.20000913145219.00b43960@alpha.dante.org.uk> Please disregard my previous mail, I clearly did not have enough coffee. This was fixed, so I will try to reformulate: 1. Do some participants on the 6bone use A6 records (and bind9), in parallel to (or without defining) AAAA records? RFC2874 predicts that AAAA should be replaced by A6 in the long run. 2. http://www.6bone.net/6bone_reverse_dns.html prones delegation of reverse resolution using NS records, and under the ip6.int tree. Bind9 introduces a new way of delegating through DNAMEs. Is anybody out there using it? As far as I can see, it may break queries, if a participant tries to use it, as many servers (or clients) may not understand DNAME answers to a PTR query. So, if this is the future, wouldnt it make sense that everybody switch progressively to bind9? Or do the majority not believe in A6 and DNAME records? Cheers, DH. ___________________________________________________________________ * * David Harmelin Network Engineer * * DANCERT Representative * Francis House * 112 Hills Road Tel +44 1223 302992 * Cambridge CB2 1PQ Fax +44 1223 303005 D A N T E United Kingdom WWW http://www.dante.net ____________________________________________________________________ From mcabral@unl.edu.ar Wed Sep 13 15:36:43 2000 From: mcabral@unl.edu.ar (Leonardo R. Cabral) Date: Wed, 13 Sep 2000 11:36:43 -0300 Subject: =?iso-8859-1?Q?Deustch_W=F6rter?= Message-ID: <003601c01d90$0a54ce40$0101015a@todos> This is a multi-part message in MIME format. ------=_NextPart_000_0033_01C01D76.E43E2BC0 Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1" Content-Transfer-Encoding: quoted-printable Hi, can anybody translate the following phrase written in a security = document in german: " Im Internet aber schreit man Zeter und Mordio, weil die Zahlungsdaten = im Klartext =FCbertragen werden. " I don=B4t know the meaning of "Zeter" and "Mordio". Thanks,=20 Auf Wiedersehen, Leonardo mcabral@unl.edu.ar=20 ------=_NextPart_000_0033_01C01D76.E43E2BC0 Content-Type: text/html; charset="iso-8859-1" Content-Transfer-Encoding: quoted-printable
Hi, can anybody translate the following = phrase=20 written in a security document in german:
" Im Internet aber schreit man Zeter = und Mordio,=20 weil die Zahlungsdaten im Klartext =FCbertragen werden. "
I don=B4t know the meaning of "Zeter" = and=20 "Mordio".
Thanks,
Auf Wiedersehen,
 
Leonardo
mcabral@unl.edu.ar=20
------=_NextPart_000_0033_01C01D76.E43E2BC0-- From fink@es.net Wed Sep 13 15:54:49 2000 From: fink@es.net (Bob Fink) Date: Wed, 13 Sep 2000 07:54:49 -0700 Subject: IPV6 reverse DNS In-Reply-To: <4.2.2.20000913145219.00b43960@alpha.dante.org.uk> References: <4.3.1.2.20000907130507.0296f008@imap2.es.net> <00dc01c01902$ef1c1d40$0200000a@moorecomputersolutions.com> Message-ID: <4.3.1.2.20000913074018.06dcdfd8@imap2.es.net> David, As this was partially addressed to me I'll make a brief reply. However, for a more informative answer, others on the 6bone list will have to respond. It is the intent for IPv6 hosts/networks to progressively switch to new versions of DNS that support A6 and DNAME records, when they are well developed, tested and widely available. I don't really know the current status of this, nor the answer to your two numbered questions, thus I must leave it to others on the list to respond. Let's see what they say. Bob At 03:07 PM 9/13/2000 +0100, David Harmelin wrote: >Please disregard my previous mail, I clearly did not have enough coffee. >This was fixed, so I will try to reformulate: > >1. Do some participants on the 6bone use A6 records (and bind9), in >parallel to (or without defining) AAAA records? RFC2874 predicts that >AAAA should be replaced by A6 in the long run. > >2. http://www.6bone.net/6bone_reverse_dns.html prones delegation of >reverse resolution using NS records, and under the ip6.int tree. >Bind9 introduces a new way of delegating through DNAMEs. Is anybody out >there using it? As far as I can see, it may break queries, if a >participant tries to use it, as many servers (or clients) may not >understand DNAME answers to a PTR query. > >So, if this is the future, wouldnt it make sense that everybody switch >progressively to bind9? >Or do the majority not believe in A6 and DNAME records? > >Cheers, > >DH. >___________________________________________________________________ > * * David Harmelin Network Engineer > * * DANCERT Representative > * Francis House > * 112 Hills Road Tel +44 1223 302992 > * Cambridge CB2 1PQ Fax +44 1223 303005 > D A N T E United Kingdom WWW http://www.dante.net >____________________________________________________________________ From psb@ast.cam.ac.uk Wed Sep 13 16:00:18 2000 From: psb@ast.cam.ac.uk (Peter Bunclark) Date: Wed, 13 Sep 2000 16:00:18 +0100 (BST) Subject: IPV6 reverse DNS In-Reply-To: <4.2.2.20000913132347.00b62500@alpha.dante.org.uk> Message-ID: On Wed, 13 Sep 2000, David Harmelin wrote: > Dear all, > > RFC 2874 predicts the replacement of AAAA records (under the ip6.int zone) > by A6 records (under the ip6.arpa zone). Hang on, AAAA records to be replaced by A6 records are in forward tables, reverse lookups under ip6.int currently using PTR records are to be replaced by bit-string labels under IP6.ARPA. Pete. From thor@zwerg.at Wed Sep 13 19:14:38 2000 From: thor@zwerg.at (Silvia Baumann) Date: Wed, 13 Sep 2000 20:14:38 +0200 (MEST) Subject: =?iso-8859-1?Q?Deustch_W=F6rter?= In-Reply-To: <003601c01d90$0a54ce40$0101015a@todos> Message-ID: Hi, > Hi, can anybody translate the following phrase written in a security > document in german: " Im Internet aber schreit man Zeter und Mordio, > weil die Zahlungsdaten im Klartext übertragen werden. " > > I don´t know the meaning of "Zeter" and "Mordio". According to the dictionary the correct phrase for Zeter and Mordio is "hue and cry" :-) The whole thing should mean something like: But in the Internet everybody is extremely upset, because the payment data is transmitted in clear text. Regards, Silvia Baumann -- . . |\-=-/| /| |O _ O| |\ /' \ \_^-^_/ / `\ /' \-/ ~ \-/ `\ | /\\ //\ | +-------\|\|\/-""-""-\/|/|/-------------------------------------------+ | thor@zwerg.at Silvia Baumann | | silvia.baumann@fh-sbg.ac.at Prueckelmayrgasse 4/11/15 | | A-1230 Wien | | http://atpforest.tuwien.ac.at/~thor/ Tel.-Nr.: +43 1 8872053 | +---------------------------------------------------------------------+ From kyhwana@world-net.co.nz Thu Sep 14 05:41:44 2000 From: kyhwana@world-net.co.nz (Daniel Richards) Date: Thu, 14 Sep 2000 16:41:44 +1200 Subject: Freenet6 IPv6 tunnel Message-ID: <00091416450300.02582@leopard.lan> -----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- Hash: SHA1 Hey all, you've probably seen this asked before, but i've looked all over and I can't seem to find an answer. Im trying to use the freenet6.net IPv6 over ipv4 tunnel. Im using linux 2.2.16 (with updated nettools/etc) but when I run "route -A inet6 default gw fe80::206.123.31.102 dev sit1" I get route: Resolver Error0 (No error) I can get ipv6 domain names by using ping6/etc but I can't seem to connect to the other side of the tunnel or anywhere else in the IPv6 network? (and yes, I have all the IPv6 stuff compiled into the kernel) If someone could point me to a webpage that has something about this i'd appreciate it. I've had a look at the IPv6 linux faqs, but none seem to help. -- http://shell.world-net.co.nz/~kyhwana/decss/ - Kyh's DeCSS stuff "'Oh dear,' says God, 'I hadn't thought of that,' and promptly vanishes in a puff of logic." -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- Version: GnuPG v1.0.1 (GNU/Linux) Comment: For info see http://www.gnupg.org iD8DBQE5wFfUHxSqGAiQwxwRAlFqAKCmqiyf5MjUl3ZpRadDyNz2SkljPwCfcB6w +5ACJYxMexf9S4TUlPndkxo= =DUXi -----END PGP SIGNATURE----- From bmanning@ISI.EDU Thu Sep 14 08:59:51 2000 From: bmanning@ISI.EDU (Bill Manning) Date: Thu, 14 Sep 2000 00:59:51 -0700 (PDT) Subject: IPV6 reverse DNS In-Reply-To: <4.2.2.20000913132347.00b62500@alpha.dante.org.uk> from "David Harmelin" at Sep 13, 2000 01:29:43 PM Message-ID: <200009140759.AAA29844@zed.isi.edu> Sure, as soon as BIND supports A6 records. Through BINDv9rc5, A6 records would cause an assertion failure. There is also a plan to open a real v6 capable root server system by the end of the year. % % Dear all, % % RFC 2874 predicts the replacement of AAAA records (under the ip6.int zone) % by A6 records (under the ip6.arpa zone). % % However, the 6bone DNS reverse delegation seems to only implement the AAAA % solution. % DANTE and the TEN-155 connected countries in Europe have started % implementing the A6 delegation, with a fake root server. % % Are there any plans on the 6bone to migrate? % % DH. % % At 01:07 PM 9/7/00 -0700, Bob Fink wrote: % You will need a nameserver that supports IPv6 AAAA records. The IPv6 DNS % Setup web % ___________________________________________________________________ % * * David Harmelin Network Engineer % * * DANCERT Representative % * Francis House % * 112 Hills Road Tel +44 1223 302992 % * Cambridge CB2 1PQ Fax +44 1223 303005 % D A N T E United Kingdom WWW http://www.dante.net % ____________________________________________________________________ % % -- --bill From bmanning@ISI.EDU Thu Sep 14 09:10:41 2000 From: bmanning@ISI.EDU (Bill Manning) Date: Thu, 14 Sep 2000 01:10:41 -0700 (PDT) Subject: IPV6 reverse DNS In-Reply-To: <4.2.2.20000913145219.00b43960@alpha.dante.org.uk> from "David Harmelin" at Sep 13, 2000 03:07:25 PM Message-ID: <200009140810.BAA29882@zed.isi.edu> In Bindv9rc5, use of A6 records will generate an assert failure -UNLESS- the A6 records are in the degeneate case where they can not be distingusished between AAAA records. Bitstrings (DNAME) lables share the same fate. Hopefully some corrections will be made before Bindv9 is actually released. There are backard compatability issues w/ earlier resolvers. % % Please disregard my previous mail, I clearly did not have enough coffee. % This was fixed, so I will try to reformulate: % % 1. Do some participants on the 6bone use A6 records (and bind9), in % parallel to (or without defining) AAAA records? RFC2874 predicts that AAAA % should be replaced by A6 in the long run. % % 2. http://www.6bone.net/6bone_reverse_dns.html prones delegation of reverse % resolution using NS records, and under the ip6.int tree. % Bind9 introduces a new way of delegating through DNAMEs. Is anybody out % there using it? As far as I can see, it may break queries, if a participant % tries to use it, as many servers (or clients) may not understand DNAME % answers to a PTR query. % % So, if this is the future, wouldnt it make sense that everybody switch % progressively to bind9? % Or do the majority not believe in A6 and DNAME records? % % Cheers, % % DH. % ___________________________________________________________________ % * * David Harmelin Network Engineer % * * DANCERT Representative % * Francis House % * 112 Hills Road Tel +44 1223 302992 % * Cambridge CB2 1PQ Fax +44 1223 303005 % D A N T E United Kingdom WWW http://www.dante.net % ____________________________________________________________________ % % -- --bill From tony@lava.net Thu Sep 14 09:18:38 2000 From: tony@lava.net (Antonio Querubin) Date: Wed, 13 Sep 2000 22:18:38 -1000 (HST) Subject: Freenet6 IPv6 tunnel In-Reply-To: <00091416450300.02582@leopard.lan> Message-ID: On Thu, 14 Sep 2000, Daniel Richards wrote: > Im trying to use the freenet6.net IPv6 over ipv4 tunnel. > Im using linux 2.2.16 (with updated nettools/etc) but when I run "route -A > inet6 default gw fe80::206.123.31.102 dev sit1" I get route: Resolver Error0 > (No error) Don't use 'default', use '::0/0' instead. Try: route -A inet6 ::0/0 dev sit1 You can also add the following to your /etc/sysconfig/static-routes file so that the default ipv6 route is added at boot time: sit1 A inet6 ::0/0 From baixauli@mat.upc.es Thu Sep 14 17:21:10 2000 From: baixauli@mat.upc.es (Julio Baixauli) Date: Thu, 14 Sep 2000 18:21:10 +0200 Subject: Ping: works/don't works (Linux) Message-ID: <39C0FAF6.7DC762BF@mat.upc.es> Hello! I've two Linux-IPv6 machines connected throw a ethernet. I can ping from one to other using site-local addresses (feco:2::209 and fec0:2::216) but I can't ping using global addresses (::ffff:0:9353:27d1 and ::ffff:0:9353:27d8). I've configured all the addresses identically ( at /etc/sysconfig/network-ip6.conf ). The question is: what's wrong?? Any ideas are welcomed!! Thank you very much! -- ******************************************** Julio Baixauli Garreta baixauli@mat.upc.es ******************************************** From sirfrom@geocities.com Thu Sep 14 17:15:52 2000 From: sirfrom@geocities.com (sirfrom@geocities.com) Date: Thu, 14 Sep 2000 18:15:52 +0200 Subject: Freenet6 IPv6 tunnel References: <00091416450300.02582@leopard.lan> Message-ID: <39C0F9B8.6586C208@geocities.com> Daniel Richards wrote: > Hey all, you've probably seen this asked before, but i've looked all over and I > can't seem to find an answer. > Im trying to use the freenet6.net IPv6 over ipv4 tunnel. > Im using linux 2.2.16 (with updated nettools/etc) but when I run "route -A > inet6 default gw fe80::206.123.31.102 dev sit1" I get route: Resolver Error0 > (No error) > I can get ipv6 domain names by using ping6/etc but I can't seem to connect to > the other side of the tunnel or anywhere else in the IPv6 network? > (and yes, I have all the IPv6 stuff compiled into the kernel) > If someone could point me to a webpage that has something about this i'd > appreciate it. I've had a look at the IPv6 linux faqs, but none seem to help. The error is the "default" in the script. Default is on some machines(and should be) an alias to ::/0. You can either set the network alias or just change default to ::/0 in the script as follows: route -A inet6 ::/0 gw fe80::206.123.31.102 dev sit1 Took me ages to figure that one out.. //Mattias From -- Sigblock empty. By choice. From pcurran@ticl.co.uk Fri Sep 15 11:25:21 2000 From: pcurran@ticl.co.uk (Peter Curran) Date: Fri, 15 Sep 2000 11:25:21 +0100 Subject: works/don't works (Linux) References: <39C0FAF6.7DC762BF@mat.upc.es> Message-ID: <009901c01eff$409711f0$0f0120c1@desktop> Julio The 'global' addresses you are using aren't! They appear to be (broken) IPv4-translatable addresses - ie IPv4 addresses encoded in IPv6 format, but denoting an IPv4-only node. Not surprisingly, your ping6 implementation doesn't work because it only handles IPv6 addresses. I suggest that you use 'real' global addresses from your tunnel provider, or try IPv4-compatible addresses. Cheers Peter ----- Original Message ----- From: "Julio Baixauli" To: "6bone mail list" <6bone@ISI.EDU> Sent: Thursday, September 14, 2000 5:21 PM Subject: Ping: works/don't works (Linux) > > Hello! > > I've two Linux-IPv6 machines connected throw a ethernet. I can ping > from one to other using site-local addresses (feco:2::209 and > fec0:2::216) but I can't ping using global addresses (::ffff:0:9353:27d1 > and ::ffff:0:9353:27d8). I've configured all the addresses identically ( > at /etc/sysconfig/network-ip6.conf ). > > The question is: what's wrong?? Any ideas are welcomed!! > > Thank you very much! > > -- > ******************************************** > > Julio Baixauli Garreta > baixauli@mat.upc.es > > ******************************************** > From mark.drayton@4thwave.co.uk Fri Sep 15 13:04:30 2000 From: mark.drayton@4thwave.co.uk (Mark Drayton) Date: Fri, 15 Sep 2000 13:04:30 +0100 (BST) Subject: Freenet6 routing troubles Message-ID: Hi I am trying to get my linux box connected to 6bone via Freenet6. I have downloaded the script from Freenet6 and changed default to ::0/0 (also tried ::/0) and run it, but I still can't ping6 a remote address or even the other end of the tunnel (ie the Freenet6 address). Pinging eth0 on the IPv6 address I got from Freenet6 works fine. [root@ipv6 /root]# ping6 3ffe:b00:c18:1fff:0:0:0:746 PING 3ffe:b00:c18:1fff:0:0:0:746(3ffe:b00:c18:1fff::746) 56 data bytes >From ::1: Destination unreachable: Address unreachable (pinging Freenet6 end of tunnel) [root@ipv6 /root]# route -A inet6 -n Kernel IPv6 routing table Destination Next Hop Flags Metric Ref Use Iface ::1/128 :: U 0 1 0 lo ::127.0.0.1/128 :: U 0 0 0 lo ::195.26.32.63/128 :: U 0 0 0 lo ::/96 :: U 256 0 0 sit0 3ffe:b00:c18:1fff::747/128 :: U 0 5 1 lo fe80::c31a:203f/128 :: U 0 0 0 lo fe80::2a0:ccff:fed0:ab74/128 :: U 0 0 0 lo fe80::/10 :: UA 256 0 0 eth0 fe80::/10 :: UA 256 0 0 sit1 ff00::/8 :: UA 256 0 0 eth0 ff00::/8 :: UA 256 0 0 sit1 ::/0 fe80::ce7b:1f66 UG 1 4 0 sit1 ::/0 :: UDA 256 0 0 eth0 I have spent days messing about with this, reading all the documentation I can find. Why does the Freenet6 script set up two tunnels whereas Peter Bieringer's docs only set up one? Also, eth0 seems to be bound to an IPv6 address when the machine is booted: [root@ipv6 /root]# ifconfig eth0 Link encap:Ethernet HWaddr 00:A0:CC:D0:AB:74 inet addr:195.26.32.63 Bcast:195.26.32.255 Mask:255.255.255.0 inet6 addr: fe80::2a0:ccff:fed0:ab74/10 Scope:Link UP BROADCAST RUNNING MULTICAST MTU:1500 Metric:1 What is this fe80::2a0:ccff:fed0:ab74/10 address? Thanks for any answers Mark Drayton 4th Wave Technologies From Marc.Blanchet@viagenie.qc.ca Thu Sep 14 10:41:51 2000 From: Marc.Blanchet@viagenie.qc.ca (Marc Blanchet) Date: Thu, 14 Sep 2000 05:41:51 -0400 Subject: Freenet6 IPv6 tunnel In-Reply-To: <00091416450300.02582@leopard.lan> Message-ID: <4.3.2.7.2.20000914054115.030fb588@mail.viagenie.qc.ca> At/À 16:41 2000-09-14 +1200, Daniel Richards you wrote/vous écriviez: >-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- >Hash: SHA1 > >Hey all, you've probably seen this asked before, but i've looked all over >and I >can't seem to find an answer. >Im trying to use the freenet6.net IPv6 over ipv4 tunnel. >Im using linux 2.2.16 (with updated nettools/etc) but when I run "route -A >inet6 default gw fe80::206.123.31.102 dev sit1" I get route: Resolver Error0 >(No error) >I can get ipv6 domain names by using ping6/etc but I can't seem to connect to >the other side of the tunnel or anywhere else in the IPv6 network? >(and yes, I have all the IPv6 stuff compiled into the kernel) >If someone could point me to a webpage that has something about this i'd >appreciate it. I've had a look at the IPv6 linux faqs, but none seem to help. send your questions to support@freenet6.net and we can try to answer your questions. Marc. > -- >http://shell.world-net.co.nz/~kyhwana/decss/ - Kyh's DeCSS stuff >"'Oh dear,' says God, 'I hadn't thought of that,' and promptly vanishes in >a puff of >logic." >-----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- >Version: GnuPG v1.0.1 (GNU/Linux) >Comment: For info see http://www.gnupg.org > >iD8DBQE5wFfUHxSqGAiQwxwRAlFqAKCmqiyf5MjUl3ZpRadDyNz2SkljPwCfcB6w >+5ACJYxMexf9S4TUlPndkxo= >=DUXi >-----END PGP SIGNATURE----- Marc Blanchet Viagénie inc. tel: 418-656-9254 http://www.viagenie.qc.ca ---------------------------------------------------------- Normos (http://www.normos.org): Internet standards portal: IETF RFC, drafts, IANA, W3C, ATMForum, ISO, ... all in one place. From hal@vailsys.com Fri Sep 15 20:17:58 2000 From: hal@vailsys.com (Hal Snyder) Date: 15 Sep 2000 14:17:58 -0500 Subject: 6bone contact request Message-ID: <871yylsbvd.fsf@ghidra.vail> Per the instructions at http://www.6bone.net/6bone_hookup.html, I'm turning to this list to request a 6bone pTLA/pNLA transit for Vail Systems. We are based in Chicago. I have emailed contacts at listed pTLAs and not heard back. Thank you. From jslagle@toledolink.com Fri Sep 15 22:52:30 2000 From: jslagle@toledolink.com (Jason) Date: Fri, 15 Sep 2000 17:52:30 -0400 (EDT) Subject: 6bone contact request In-Reply-To: <871yylsbvd.fsf@ghidra.vail> Message-ID: Looking just for 6bone transit? If so, I can help. I'm TIAI :) Jason --- Jason Slagle - CCNA - CCDA Network Administrator - Toledo Internet Access - Toledo Ohio - raistlin@tacorp.net - jslagle@toledolink.com - WHOIS JS10172 -----BEGIN GEEK CODE BLOCK----- Version: 3.12 GE d-- s:+ a-- C++ UL+++ P--- L+++ E- W- N+ o-- K- w--- O M- V PS+ PE+++ Y+ PGP t+ 5 X+ R tv+ b+ DI+ D G e+ h! r++ y+ ------END GEEK CODE BLOCK------ On 15 Sep 2000, Hal Snyder wrote: > Per the instructions at http://www.6bone.net/6bone_hookup.html, I'm > turning to this list to request a 6bone pTLA/pNLA transit for Vail > Systems. We are based in Chicago. I have emailed contacts at listed > pTLAs and not heard back. > > Thank you. > From cmj@3Com.com Fri Sep 15 23:38:38 2000 From: cmj@3Com.com (Cyndi Jung) Date: Fri, 15 Sep 2000 15:38:38 -0700 Subject: 6bone contact request In-Reply-To: References: <871yylsbvd.fsf@ghidra.vail> Message-ID: <3.0.6.32.20000915153838.00a4d950@mailhost.ewd.3com.com> Jason, I have also offered Hal a tunnel, and from the network traces, he is quite close, topologically, to my site, since we are both connecting through Level 3. My traces to your site go through mae-east - I suspect Hal's path to you goes a similar route out of Level 3's network. It's up to Hal, but I think I have the quicker path :-) Cyndi At 05:52 PM 9/15/00 -0400, Jason wrote: >Looking just for 6bone transit? > >If so, I can help. > >I'm TIAI :) > >Jason > >--- >Jason Slagle - CCNA - CCDA >Network Administrator - Toledo Internet Access - Toledo Ohio >- raistlin@tacorp.net - jslagle@toledolink.com - WHOIS JS10172 >-----BEGIN GEEK CODE BLOCK----- >Version: 3.12 GE d-- s:+ a-- C++ UL+++ P--- L+++ E- W- N+ o-- K- w--- >O M- V PS+ PE+++ Y+ PGP t+ 5 X+ R tv+ b+ DI+ D G e+ h! r++ y+ >------END GEEK CODE BLOCK------ > > >On 15 Sep 2000, Hal Snyder wrote: > >> Per the instructions at http://www.6bone.net/6bone_hookup.html, I'm >> turning to this list to request a 6bone pTLA/pNLA transit for Vail >> Systems. We are based in Chicago. I have emailed contacts at listed >> pTLAs and not heard back. >> >> Thank you. >> > > From tv@pobox.com Sat Sep 16 02:00:50 2000 From: tv@pobox.com (Todd Vierling) Date: Fri, 15 Sep 2000 21:00:50 -0400 (EDT) Subject: Tunnel request (24.31.102.19, Atlanta GA) Message-ID: I am trying to find someone to carry a relatively low usage tunnel and provide a delegation of as small as /124. I work for Wasabi Systems, who commercially supports NetBSD, with the integrated KAME/WIDE merged stack. I can accept just about any tunnel method, including 6to4, gif (RFC1933), and GRE. I've tried contacting the MERIT and ANSNET people, with ANSNET's mail bouncing, and MERIT's mail looping. These are the two pTLAs that are closest to me as the fiber runs, at 12 and 13 hops, respectively. A pNLA is fine with me, too, if someone's within the RR network or close by, so please let me know! RoadRunner in Atlanta has near peerings with: att.net (9 hops, Greensboro NC: 12.124.235.25, but Amazingly Low Latency) cw.net (5 hops, core3.Atlanta.cw.net) sprintlink.net (7/8 hops, sl-bb22-atl-0-0.sprintlink.net) There's also 10-11 hop links to Qwest (Atlanta GA) and BBN (VA), if you have really short trips to those networks. If you're going to traceroute, ignore high latency in the last few hops of the 24.88 and 24.31 networks; there's a local router that's been running underpowered for the past two days and is being replaced. ...Thanks in advance! -- -- Todd Vierling (tv@pobox.com) From zethix@sofiaonline.com Sun Sep 17 20:34:02 2000 From: zethix@sofiaonline.com (Andrey Roussev) Date: Sun, 17 Sep 2000 19:34:02 +0000 Subject: Starting point for a new IPv6 "user"? Message-ID: <39C51CAA.18B3C0C3@sofiaonline.com> Hi there, First of all, please excuse my poor english Today I got my first IPv6 address. As I'm interested as a network programmer, I would like to do a little bit more testing (than just pinging 2 or 3 hosts I know :). My question is if I could find somewhere any information about such test services. May be a list of experimental sites running some sort of experimental services or something... I'm also interested in taking part of IPv6 projects. I will appreciate any help. Thanks. From Hristo@BSE.BG Mon Sep 18 07:23:01 2000 From: Hristo@BSE.BG (Hristo Grigorov) Date: Mon, 18 Sep 2000 09:23:01 +0300 Subject: Starting point for a new IPv6 "user"? References: <39C51CAA.18B3C0C3@sofiaonline.com> Message-ID: <002e01c02138$e5b148a0$0900a8c0@isbourgas.net> http://www.6bone.net/ is a good starting point :) ----- Original Message ----- From: "Andrey Roussev" To: <6bone@ISI.EDU> Sent: Sunday, September 17, 2000 10:34 PM Subject: Starting point for a new IPv6 "user"? > Hi there, > > First of all, please excuse my poor english > Today I got my first IPv6 address. As I'm interested as a network > programmer, I would like to do a little bit more testing (than just > pinging 2 or 3 hosts I know :). My question is if I could find somewhere > any information about such test services. May be a list of experimental > sites running some sort of experimental services or something... I'm > also interested in taking part of IPv6 projects. > > I will appreciate any help. Thanks. > From baixauli@mat.upc.es Mon Sep 18 16:47:11 2000 From: baixauli@mat.upc.es (Julio Baixauli) Date: Mon, 18 Sep 2000 17:47:11 +0200 Subject: About freenet6 and ::ffff:0:X:X/96 addresses Message-ID: <39C638FF.29C24BDF@mat.upc.es> Hello! I've a tunnel with Freenet6 configured and working (I can ping www.6bone.net) throw eth0 (Red Hat Linux), but when I add an ::ffff:0:x:x/96 address to the eth1 card, the tunnel don't work. When the tunnel works, the IPv6 source address (of the packet in the tunnel) is 3ffe:b00:c18:1fff::85f (as should be), but when I add the ::ffff:0:x:x/96 to eth1 the IPv6 source address is ::ffff:0:x:x (wrong, because the echo reply packet can't find me). The question is: how can I decide wich address must to be used as source address? (if I can). Thank you very much. (I'm sorry, my english is horrible) -- ******************************************** Julio Baixauli Garreta baixauli@mat.upc.es ******************************************** From jim@thehousleys.net Mon Sep 18 21:36:39 2000 From: jim@thehousleys.net (James Housley) Date: Mon, 18 Sep 2000 16:36:39 -0400 Subject: About freenet6 and ::ffff:0:X:X/96 addresses References: <39C638FF.29C24BDF@mat.upc.es> Message-ID: <39C67CD7.54127203@thehousleys.net> This is a cryptographically signed message in MIME format. --------------ms21DFF0735E2FA327FDE0C7BF Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit Julio Baixauli wrote: > > Hello! > > I've a tunnel with Freenet6 configured and working (I can ping > www.6bone.net) throw eth0 (Red Hat Linux), but when I add an > ::ffff:0:x:x/96 address to the eth1 card, the tunnel don't work. > When the tunnel works, the IPv6 source address (of the packet in the > tunnel) is 3ffe:b00:c18:1fff::85f (as should be), but when I add the > ::ffff:0:x:x/96 to eth1 the IPv6 source address is ::ffff:0:x:x (wrong, > because the echo reply packet can't find me). > The question is: how can I decide wich address must to be used as > source address? (if I can). > Unless Freenet6 has changed things, you can not do that. They only give you a single address to work with. Jim -- If it happens once, it's a bug. If it happens twice, it's a feature. If it happens more than twice, it's windows. -- Luiz de Barros --------------ms21DFF0735E2FA327FDE0C7BF Content-Type: application/x-pkcs7-signature; name="smime.p7s" Content-Transfer-Encoding: base64 Content-Disposition: attachment; filename="smime.p7s" Content-Description: S/MIME Cryptographic Signature MIIH7gYJKoZIhvcNAQcCoIIH3zCCB9sCAQExCzAJBgUrDgMCGgUAMAsGCSqGSIb3DQEHAaCC Bb8wggKjMIICDKADAgECAgMDLRswDQYJKoZIhvcNAQEEBQAwgZQxCzAJBgNVBAYTAlpBMRUw EwYDVQQIEwxXZXN0ZXJuIENhcGUxFDASBgNVBAcTC0R1cmJhbnZpbGxlMQ8wDQYDVQQKEwZU aGF3dGUxHTAbBgNVBAsTFENlcnRpZmljYXRlIFNlcnZpY2VzMSgwJgYDVQQDEx9QZXJzb25h bCBGcmVlbWFpbCBSU0EgMTk5OS45LjE2MB4XDTAwMDgzMTExMjUzM1oXDTAxMDgzMTExMjUz M1owRTEfMB0GA1UEAxMWVGhhd3RlIEZyZWVtYWlsIE1lbWJlcjEiMCAGCSqGSIb3DQEJARYT amltQHRoZWhvdXNsZXlzLm5ldDCBnzANBgkqhkiG9w0BAQEFAAOBjQAwgYkCgYEAoecaMx4y p2rGru9O4EGcnetN3YJekZy3C7BvhxuvN+fboBpG2MSEUMBZzGX0CSZwBC1SapoZnyqzRItc OgUjSRrUhGfcSQ0nZv/dxaWb3L68+f4pDkALZ4WxR7feY8Cur2SrybM0wtpGcTioNWKbMNRd wDBxD/jgggHAa8hSo3sCAwEAAaNRME8wHgYDVR0RBBcwFYETamltQHRoZWhvdXNsZXlzLm5l dDAMBgNVHRMBAf8EAjAAMB8GA1UdIwQYMBaAFIir8WCDZlX05FjHRh3AYb0j18OMMA0GCSqG SIb3DQEBBAUAA4GBAE2PrU05luhZFcnuwpIpcqFqg+F5uuN4XO9tSX1KTCI1/YIUoTUuMyQa FO/n+Xm9xxv36v+RzVFbXjaDbg6m89qyWeawORQplL0JhXQmh10Anjg/RkBwt02FeLjbTZ7Z 6PiLOLKfuLPFYTcaSBavOIRbvVSWrK6o7DmZKhe1YgWVMIIDFDCCAn2gAwIBAgIBCzANBgkq hkiG9w0BAQQFADCB0TELMAkGA1UEBhMCWkExFTATBgNVBAgTDFdlc3Rlcm4gQ2FwZTESMBAG A1UEBxMJQ2FwZSBUb3duMRowGAYDVQQKExFUaGF3dGUgQ29uc3VsdGluZzEoMCYGA1UECxMf Q2VydGlmaWNhdGlvbiBTZXJ2aWNlcyBEaXZpc2lvbjEkMCIGA1UEAxMbVGhhd3RlIFBlcnNv bmFsIEZyZWVtYWlsIENBMSswKQYJKoZIhvcNAQkBFhxwZXJzb25hbC1mcmVlbWFpbEB0aGF3 dGUuY29tMB4XDTk5MDkxNjE0MDE0MFoXDTAxMDkxNTE0MDE0MFowgZQxCzAJBgNVBAYTAlpB MRUwEwYDVQQIEwxXZXN0ZXJuIENhcGUxFDASBgNVBAcTC0R1cmJhbnZpbGxlMQ8wDQYDVQQK EwZUaGF3dGUxHTAbBgNVBAsTFENlcnRpZmljYXRlIFNlcnZpY2VzMSgwJgYDVQQDEx9QZXJz b25hbCBGcmVlbWFpbCBSU0EgMTk5OS45LjE2MIGfMA0GCSqGSIb3DQEBAQUAA4GNADCBiQKB gQCzaVqX1NAWC3q1xV3pIZwjcs0STEv3fs/H+8pyJPRCUqxXleN7YXoXhOf9cjk4lLTq7WWn kgZeveBl9hm7lHl2TD65aHB1hBz0EXQAvAUsTwkDFzHM9EHUcsamXeKIRLCLLsRN8fDWhT5s 85WUeJF+QOmc0Y0VV47Cc+Uw3kb1TwIDAQABozcwNTASBgNVHRMBAf8ECDAGAQH/AgEAMB8G A1UdIwQYMBaAFHJJwnM0xlX0C3ZygX539IfnxrIOMA0GCSqGSIb3DQEBBAUAA4GBAGvGWekx +um27LED2N9ycv6RYEjqxlXde/BnjsZhcOdtwqU32J23FyhWBYvdXHVvxpGQxmxmcRPQEHxr kW+G4CE2LcHX6rIJrc8tbcaDUpv7u/6ch538t+l0kuRcl678fqzKDW9yemcsa3P1hvmd9QBu 9B0Hzp2egmMp75MJflXeMYIB9zCCAfMCAQEwgZwwgZQxCzAJBgNVBAYTAlpBMRUwEwYDVQQI EwxXZXN0ZXJuIENhcGUxFDASBgNVBAcTC0R1cmJhbnZpbGxlMQ8wDQYDVQQKEwZUaGF3dGUx HTAbBgNVBAsTFENlcnRpZmljYXRlIFNlcnZpY2VzMSgwJgYDVQQDEx9QZXJzb25hbCBGcmVl bWFpbCBSU0EgMTk5OS45LjE2AgMDLRswCQYFKw4DAhoFAKCBsTAYBgkqhkiG9w0BCQMxCwYJ KoZIhvcNAQcBMBwGCSqGSIb3DQEJBTEPFw0wMDA5MTgyMDM2NDFaMCMGCSqGSIb3DQEJBDEW BBRa5TjC7PsjwVZpwvb8miYZuqZw0zBSBgkqhkiG9w0BCQ8xRTBDMAoGCCqGSIb3DQMHMA4G CCqGSIb3DQMCAgIAgDAHBgUrDgMCBzANBggqhkiG9w0DAgIBQDANBggqhkiG9w0DAgIBKDAN BgkqhkiG9w0BAQEFAASBgC7o2XHUHZEI/0fybzLMg/86o/Lcbnls1K6VFUkFApDFB7qJaMon v0EX6TgoUGGdstluqOP+zZSghBQ9Dbt8+TAuPwB9G/DQ3zkPzReXNVVu3pzni5TPeMXv4g04 rfjXv7d3K48kTeKNCSKW3HXDGyRcPCp+OtyibrElU3JX0MOR --------------ms21DFF0735E2FA327FDE0C7BF-- From hswu@ns.6test.edu.cn Tue Sep 19 13:46:54 2000 From: hswu@ns.6test.edu.cn (Haisang Wu) Date: Tue, 19 Sep 2000 20:46:54 +0800 (CST) Subject: routing tools?? Message-ID: <200009191246.UAA01958@ns.6test.edu.cn> Hi, dear all: I used mrt as the routing daemon in my box with FreeBSD3.2+Kamev6 to run eBGP and iBGP before. But After I changed FreeBSD3.2 into FreeBSD4.1, I found that mrg cannot be correctly installed. Here is what in mrt installation guide: "Because the IPv6 kernel implementations and API specifications are still in flux, MRT may not run on the latest IPv6 platforms." Could anyone tell me how to make mrt under FreeBSdD4.x, or recommend another good routing daemon? (BGP and others). Thanks to all of you. Haisang From JBrown@thrupoint.net Tue Sep 19 18:37:26 2000 From: JBrown@thrupoint.net (Brown, James) Date: Tue, 19 Sep 2000 13:37:26 -0400 Subject: routing tools?? Message-ID: This message is in MIME format. Since your mail reader does not understand this format, some or all of this message may not be legible. ------_=_NextPart_001_01C02260.46FEE0CC Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1" Hi Dear Wu, Zebra-0.88 is listed in the FreeBSD 4.1 ports collection. I believe it supports BGP4 and BGP4+. Check www.zebra.org for more details. Regards, jpb === -----Original Message----- From: Haisang Wu To: 6bone@ISI.EDU Sent: 9/19/00 8:46 AM Subject: routing tools?? Hi, dear all: I used mrt as the routing daemon in my box with FreeBSD3.2+Kamev6 to run eBGP and iBGP before. But After I changed FreeBSD3.2 into FreeBSD4.1, I found that mrg cannot be correctly installed. Here is what in mrt installation guide: "Because the IPv6 kernel implementations and API specifications are still in flux, MRT may not run on the latest IPv6 platforms." Could anyone tell me how to make mrt under FreeBSdD4.x, or recommend another good routing daemon? (BGP and others). Thanks to all of you. Haisang ------_=_NextPart_001_01C02260.46FEE0CC Content-Type: text/html; charset="iso-8859-1" Content-Transfer-Encoding: quoted-printable RE: routing tools??

Hi Dear Wu,

Zebra-0.88 is listed in the FreeBSD 4.1 ports = collection.

I believe it supports BGP4 and BGP4+.

Check www.zebra.org for more details.

Regards,
jpb
=3D=3D=3D


-----Original Message-----
From: Haisang Wu
To: 6bone@ISI.EDU
Sent: 9/19/00 8:46 AM
Subject: routing tools??

Hi, dear all:
  I used mrt as the routing daemon in my box = with FreeBSD3.2+Kamev6 to
run
eBGP and iBGP before. But After I changed FreeBSD3.2 = into FreeBSD4.1, I
found
that mrg cannot be correctly installed. Here is what = in mrt installation
guide:
"Because the IPv6 kernel implementations and = API specifications are
still in
flux, MRT may not run on the latest IPv6 = platforms."
  Could anyone tell me how to make mrt under = FreeBSdD4.x, or recommend
another good routing daemon? (BGP and = others).
  Thanks to all of you.
          &nb= sp;           &nb= sp;  Haisang

------_=_NextPart_001_01C02260.46FEE0CC-- From louis@trapezoid.com Tue Sep 19 23:31:59 2000 From: louis@trapezoid.com (Louis Zuckerman) Date: Tue, 19 Sep 2000 18:31:59 -0400 (EDT) Subject: routing tools?? In-Reply-To: Message-ID: Why would I use one of Zebra, MRT, or BIRD over the others? Does one have some special-ness that the others lack? Thanks, Louis Z From Florent.Parent@viagenie.qc.ca Wed Sep 20 00:53:43 2000 From: Florent.Parent@viagenie.qc.ca (Florent Parent) Date: Tue, 19 Sep 2000 19:53:43 -0400 Subject: routing tools?? In-Reply-To: <200009191246.UAA01958@ns.6test.edu.cn> Message-ID: <5.0.0.25.0.20000919194657.02b60d88@localhost> Haisang, Get the latest MRTd source from http://sourceforge.net/projects/mrt I commited a patch (configure.in) last week to fix a problem when compiling MRTd + IPv6 on FreeBSD 4.1 release. This should/may fix your problem. If not, send a bug report on mrt-discuss@merit.edu Florent. At 20:46 2000-09-19 +0800, Haisang Wu wrote: >Hi, dear all: > I used mrt as the routing daemon in my box with FreeBSD3.2+Kamev6 to run >eBGP and iBGP before. But After I changed FreeBSD3.2 into FreeBSD4.1, I found >that mrg cannot be correctly installed. Here is what in mrt installation >guide: >"Because the IPv6 kernel implementations and API specifications are still in >flux, MRT may not run on the latest IPv6 platforms." > Could anyone tell me how to make mrt under FreeBSdD4.x, or recommend >another good routing daemon? (BGP and others). > Thanks to all of you. > Haisang From patjensen@mediaone.net Wed Sep 20 02:14:32 2000 From: patjensen@mediaone.net (Pat Jensen) Date: Tue, 19 Sep 2000 18:14:32 -0700 Subject: routing tools?? References: Message-ID: <39C80F78.71E320D5@mediaone.net> Haisang, I use GNU Zebra as well on FreeBSD 4.1 and use its BGP+ functionality with my Sprintlink connection. It works great and it is modular (one daemon can't break and bring the whole router down) and has Cisco-like configuration commands and modes. Pretty slick setup. Pat "Brown, James" wrote: > > > Hi Dear Wu, > > Zebra-0.88 is listed in the FreeBSD 4.1 ports collection. > > I believe it supports BGP4 and BGP4+. > > Check www.zebra.org for more details. > > Regards, > jpb > === > > -----Original Message----- > From: Haisang Wu > To: 6bone@ISI.EDU > Sent: 9/19/00 8:46 AM > Subject: routing tools?? > > Hi, dear all: > I used mrt as the routing daemon in my box with FreeBSD3.2+Kamev6 to > > run > eBGP and iBGP before. But After I changed FreeBSD3.2 into FreeBSD4.1, > I > found > that mrg cannot be correctly installed. Here is what in mrt > installation > guide: > "Because the IPv6 kernel implementations and API specifications are > still in > flux, MRT may not run on the latest IPv6 platforms." > Could anyone tell me how to make mrt under FreeBSdD4.x, or recommend > > another good routing daemon? (BGP and others). > Thanks to all of you. > Haisang From matthew@intelenet.net Wed Sep 20 02:48:12 2000 From: matthew@intelenet.net (matthew zeier) Date: Tue, 19 Sep 2000 18:48:12 -0700 Subject: routing tools?? In-Reply-To: ; from louis@trapezoid.com on Tue, Sep 19, 2000 at 06:31:59PM -0400 References: Message-ID: <20000919184812.Q25726@intelenet.net> On Tue, Sep 19, 2000 at 06:31:59PM -0400, Louis Zuckerman wrote: > Why would I use one of Zebra, MRT, or BIRD over the others? Does one have > some special-ness that the others lack? zebra is very Cisco IOS-like. If your familiar with IOS you should be pretty familiar with zebra. The others I haven't used. - mz -- matthew zeier - "There ain't no rules around here. We're trying to accomplish something." - Thomas Edison From matthew@intelenet.net Wed Sep 20 05:51:44 2000 From: matthew@intelenet.net (matthew zeier) Date: Tue, 19 Sep 2000 21:51:44 -0700 Subject: v6 subnet calculator ? Message-ID: <20000919215144.A10771@intelenet.net> I'm having a problem wrapping my mind around v6 subnetting. Is there a subnet calculator online someplace? -- matthew zeier - "There ain't no rules around here. We're trying to accomplish something." - Thomas Edison From kaos@ocs.com.au Wed Sep 20 06:21:38 2000 From: kaos@ocs.com.au (Keith Owens) Date: Wed, 20 Sep 2000 16:21:38 +1100 Subject: v6 subnet calculator ? In-Reply-To: Your message of "Tue, 19 Sep 2000 21:51:44 PDT." <20000919215144.A10771@intelenet.net> Message-ID: <4869.969427298@kao2.melbourne.sgi.com> On Tue, 19 Sep 2000 21:51:44 -0700, matthew zeier wrote: >I'm having a problem wrapping my mind around v6 subnetting. Is there a >subnet calculator online someplace? ftp://ftp.ocs.com.au/pub/ip6_int.gz Not a full blown calculator, just enough to handle DNS records for v6. # ip6_int ff::1 1.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.f.f.0.0.ip6.int # ip6_int ff::1/32 0.0.0.0.f.f.0.0.ip6.int (network part) # ip6_int ff::1/-32 1.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0 (host part) From kontogia@cti.gr Wed Sep 20 10:45:59 2000 From: kontogia@cti.gr (Kontogianni Vicky) Date: Wed, 20 Sep 2000 12:45:59 +0300 Subject: CISCO router advertisements Message-ID: <001401c022e7$95c4db30$a3818c96@kontogianni> Hello everybody, I have a CISCO router and I want it to advertise the site prefix to one of its Ethernet connections (it seems that it does not...) in order to support stateless autoconfig. Any suggestions??? Thank you in advance for the responses, Vicky Kontogianni Network Technologies Sector Computer Technology Institute Patras - GREECE Tel. +30 61 960377 e-mail: kontogia@cti.gr From matthew@intelenet.net Wed Sep 20 20:59:28 2000 From: matthew@intelenet.net (matthew zeier) Date: Wed, 20 Sep 2000 12:59:28 -0700 Subject: zebra ipv6 bgp peering Message-ID: <20000920125928.A25726@intelenet.net> Has anyone successfully gotten zebra to peer with a v6 peer? I'm trying to peer with 3Com - router bgp 5693 bgp router-id 206.82.192.10 ipv6 bgp network 3ffe:1900::/48 ipv6 bgp neighbor 3ffe:1900:3::1 remote-as 561 ipv6 bgp neighbor 3ffe:1900:3::1 description 3Com IPv6 ipv6 bgp neighbor 3ffe:1900:3::1 soft-reconfiguration inbound I'm getting the following in my log: BGP: 3ffe:1900:3::1 [Update:RECV] 3ffe:3800::13:0/112 nexthop: 129.213.128.90 mp_nexthop: 3ffe:1900:3::1(fe80::200:81ff:fed5:805a) aspath: 561 237 12199 ? BGP: 3ffe:1900:3::1 [Update:RECV] 3ffe:2e00::/24 nexthop: 129.213.128.90 mp_nexthop: 3ffe:1900:3::1(fe80::200:81ff:fed5:805a) aspath: 561 6175 4554 3748 ? BGP: 3ffe:1900:3::1 [Update:RECV] 3ffe:1800::/24 nexthop: 129.213.128.90 mp_nexthop: 3ffe:1900:3::1(fe80::200:81ff:fed5:805a) aspath: 561 6175 4697 ? BGP: 3ffe:1900:3::1 [Update:RECV] 2001:208::/35 nexthop: 129.213.128.90 mp_nexthop: 3ffe:1900:3::1(fe80::200:81ff:fed5:805a) aspath: 561 10566 7610 ? BGP: 3ffe:1900:3::1 [Notify:RECV] UPDATE Message Error (Invalid NEXT_HOP Attribute.) I'm not clear if this is a zebra issue or some incompatibility with a 3Com router. If anyone's successfully using zebra, please let me know. I'm running this on OpenBSD 2.7. -- matthew zeier - "There ain't no rules around here. We're trying to accomplish something." - Thomas Edison From patjensen@mediaone.net Thu Sep 21 06:05:19 2000 From: patjensen@mediaone.net (Pat Jensen) Date: Wed, 20 Sep 2000 22:05:19 -0700 Subject: zebra ipv6 bgp peering References: <20000920125928.A25726@intelenet.net> Message-ID: <39C9970F.59F83935@mediaone.net> I am successfully peering with a Cisco router (probably a 7000 series) at Sprint with Zebra (on both FreeBSD and OpenBSD). Was fairly easy to setup since I knew a little bit about setting up BGP on IOS .. the commands are almost the same. The only problem I had was I botched up Sprint's ASN .. I couldn't start a session successfully. My configuration is: router bgp 65535 bgp router-id 10.0.0.1 ! ipv6 bgp network 3ffe:2900:e006::/48 ipv6 bgp neighbor 3ffe:2900:e:6::1 remote-as 65535 ! ipv6 access-list all permit any Hope it helps! -Pat matthew zeier wrote: > Has anyone successfully gotten zebra to peer with a v6 peer? > > I'm trying to peer with 3Com - > > router bgp 5693 > bgp router-id 206.82.192.10 > ipv6 bgp network 3ffe:1900::/48 > ipv6 bgp neighbor 3ffe:1900:3::1 remote-as 561 > ipv6 bgp neighbor 3ffe:1900:3::1 description 3Com IPv6 > ipv6 bgp neighbor 3ffe:1900:3::1 soft-reconfiguration inbound > > I'm getting the following in my log: > > BGP: 3ffe:1900:3::1 [Update:RECV] 3ffe:3800::13:0/112 nexthop: > 129.213.128.90 mp_nexthop: 3ffe:1900:3::1(fe80::200:81ff:fed5:805a) > aspath: 561 237 12199 ? > BGP: 3ffe:1900:3::1 [Update:RECV] 3ffe:2e00::/24 nexthop: 129.213.128.90 > mp_nexthop: 3ffe:1900:3::1(fe80::200:81ff:fed5:805a) aspath: 561 6175 > 4554 3748 ? > BGP: 3ffe:1900:3::1 [Update:RECV] 3ffe:1800::/24 nexthop: 129.213.128.90 > mp_nexthop: 3ffe:1900:3::1(fe80::200:81ff:fed5:805a) aspath: 561 6175 > 4697 ? > BGP: 3ffe:1900:3::1 [Update:RECV] 2001:208::/35 nexthop: 129.213.128.90 > mp_nexthop: 3ffe:1900:3::1(fe80::200:81ff:fed5:805a) aspath: 561 10566 > 7610 ? > BGP: 3ffe:1900:3::1 [Notify:RECV] UPDATE Message Error (Invalid NEXT_HOP > Attribute.) > > I'm not clear if this is a zebra issue or some incompatibility with a > 3Com router. If anyone's successfully using zebra, please let me know. > I'm running this on OpenBSD 2.7. > > -- > matthew zeier - "There ain't no rules around here. We're trying to > accomplish something." - Thomas Edison From matthew@intelenet.net Thu Sep 21 06:37:00 2000 From: matthew@intelenet.net (matthew zeier) Date: Wed, 20 Sep 2000 22:37:00 -0700 Subject: zebra ipv6 bgp peering In-Reply-To: <39C9970F.59F83935@mediaone.net>; from patjensen@mediaone.net on Wed, Sep 20, 2000 at 10:05:19PM -0700 References: <20000920125928.A25726@intelenet.net> <39C9970F.59F83935@mediaone.net> Message-ID: <20000920223700.P25726@intelenet.net> On Wed, Sep 20, 2000 at 10:05:19PM -0700, Pat Jensen wrote: > > I am successfully peering with a Cisco router (probably a 7000 series) at > Sprint with Zebra (on both FreeBSD and OpenBSD). > Was fairly easy to setup since I knew a little bit about setting up BGP on > IOS .. the commands are almost the same. > The only problem I had was I botched up Sprint's ASN .. I couldn't start a > session successfully. > > My configuration is: > > router bgp 65535 > bgp router-id 10.0.0.1 > ! > ipv6 bgp network 3ffe:2900:e006::/48 > ipv6 bgp neighbor 3ffe:2900:e:6::1 remote-as 65535 > ! > ipv6 access-list all permit any That's essentially what I have. Is zebra complaining about the nexthop from 129.213.128.90 ? I'm not sure how to see what the NEXT_HOP Attribute is. BGP: 3ffe:1900:3::1 [Update:RECV] 2001:608::/35 nexthop: 129.213.128.90 mp_nexthop: 3ffe:1900:3::1(fe80::200:81ff:fed5:805a) aspath: 561 10566 1930 1273 5539 ? BGP: 3ffe:1900:3::1 [Notify:RECV] UPDATE Message Error (Invalid NEXT_HOP Attribute.) Pat (or anyone else), can I set up a peering with you to try to determine if it's a compatibility issue with 3Com routes and zebra? - mz -- matthew zeier - "There ain't no rules around here. We're trying to accomplish something." - Thomas Edison From matthew@intelenet.net Thu Sep 21 06:48:02 2000 From: matthew@intelenet.net (matthew zeier) Date: Wed, 20 Sep 2000 22:48:02 -0700 Subject: zebra ipv6 bgp peering In-Reply-To: <39C9970F.59F83935@mediaone.net>; from patjensen@mediaone.net on Wed, Sep 20, 2000 at 10:05:19PM -0700 References: <20000920125928.A25726@intelenet.net> <39C9970F.59F83935@mediaone.net> Message-ID: <20000920224802.Q25726@intelenet.net> Ugh. I must not have my network statement right. After doing a no ipv6 bgp network 3ffe:1900::/48 I seem to have been able to establish this peering. On Wed, Sep 20, 2000 at 10:05:19PM -0700, Pat Jensen wrote: > > I am successfully peering with a Cisco router (probably a 7000 series) at > Sprint with Zebra (on both FreeBSD and OpenBSD). > Was fairly easy to setup since I knew a little bit about setting up BGP on > IOS .. the commands are almost the same. > The only problem I had was I botched up Sprint's ASN .. I couldn't start a > session successfully. > > My configuration is: > > router bgp 65535 > bgp router-id 10.0.0.1 > ! > ipv6 bgp network 3ffe:2900:e006::/48 > ipv6 bgp neighbor 3ffe:2900:e:6::1 remote-as 65535 > ! > ipv6 access-list all permit any > > Hope it helps! > > -Pat > > matthew zeier wrote: > > > Has anyone successfully gotten zebra to peer with a v6 peer? > > > > I'm trying to peer with 3Com - > > > > router bgp 5693 > > bgp router-id 206.82.192.10 > > ipv6 bgp network 3ffe:1900::/48 > > ipv6 bgp neighbor 3ffe:1900:3::1 remote-as 561 > > ipv6 bgp neighbor 3ffe:1900:3::1 description 3Com IPv6 > > ipv6 bgp neighbor 3ffe:1900:3::1 soft-reconfiguration inbound > > > > I'm getting the following in my log: > > > > BGP: 3ffe:1900:3::1 [Update:RECV] 3ffe:3800::13:0/112 nexthop: > > 129.213.128.90 mp_nexthop: 3ffe:1900:3::1(fe80::200:81ff:fed5:805a) > > aspath: 561 237 12199 ? > > BGP: 3ffe:1900:3::1 [Update:RECV] 3ffe:2e00::/24 nexthop: 129.213.128.90 > > mp_nexthop: 3ffe:1900:3::1(fe80::200:81ff:fed5:805a) aspath: 561 6175 > > 4554 3748 ? > > BGP: 3ffe:1900:3::1 [Update:RECV] 3ffe:1800::/24 nexthop: 129.213.128.90 > > mp_nexthop: 3ffe:1900:3::1(fe80::200:81ff:fed5:805a) aspath: 561 6175 > > 4697 ? > > BGP: 3ffe:1900:3::1 [Update:RECV] 2001:208::/35 nexthop: 129.213.128.90 > > mp_nexthop: 3ffe:1900:3::1(fe80::200:81ff:fed5:805a) aspath: 561 10566 > > 7610 ? > > BGP: 3ffe:1900:3::1 [Notify:RECV] UPDATE Message Error (Invalid NEXT_HOP > > Attribute.) > > > > I'm not clear if this is a zebra issue or some incompatibility with a > > 3Com router. If anyone's successfully using zebra, please let me know. > > I'm running this on OpenBSD 2.7. > > > > -- > > matthew zeier - "There ain't no rules around here. We're trying to > > accomplish something." - Thomas Edison -- matthew zeier - "There ain't no rules around here. We're trying to accomplish something." - Thomas Edison From kunihiro@zebra.org Thu Sep 21 07:12:43 2000 From: kunihiro@zebra.org (Kunihiro Ishiguro) Date: Wed, 20 Sep 2000 23:12:43 -0700 Subject: zebra ipv6 bgp peering In-Reply-To: In your message of "Wed, 20 Sep 2000 22:37:00 -0700" <20000920223700.P25726@intelenet.net> References: <20000920125928.A25726@intelenet.net> <39C9970F.59F83935@mediaone.net> <20000920223700.P25726@intelenet.net> Message-ID: <14793.42715.359633.68187Y@vaio.zebra.org> >That's essentially what I have. Is zebra complaining about the nexthop >from 129.213.128.90 ? I'm not sure how to see what the NEXT_HOP >Attribute is. > >BGP: 3ffe:1900:3::1 [Update:RECV] 2001:608::/35 nexthop: 129.213.128.90 >mp_nexthop: 3ffe:1900:3::1(fe80::200:81ff:fed5:805a) aspath: 561 10566 >1930 1273 5539 ? >BGP: 3ffe:1900:3::1 [Notify:RECV] UPDATE Message Error (Invalid NEXT_HOP >Attribute.) > > >Pat (or anyone else), can I set up a peering with you to try to >determine if it's a compatibility issue with 3Com routes and zebra? It seems that 3Com router send Notify to Zebra. I'm not sure why 3Com router complain about the nexthop. You can manipulate next-hop by route-map. BTW, we should move to Zebra ML at zebra@zebra. -- Kunihiro Ishiguro From andrius@andrius.org Thu Sep 21 09:49:40 2000 From: andrius@andrius.org (Andrius Kasparavicius) Date: Thu, 21 Sep 2000 10:49:40 +0200 (GMT-2) Subject: zebra ipv6 bgp peering In-Reply-To: <20000920125928.A25726@intelenet.net> Message-ID: On Wed, 20 Sep 2000, matthew zeier wrote: > > Has anyone successfully gotten zebra to peer with a v6 peer? > > I'm trying to peer with 3Com - > > router bgp 5693 > bgp router-id 206.82.192.10 > ipv6 bgp network 3ffe:1900::/48 > ipv6 bgp neighbor 3ffe:1900:3::1 remote-as 561 > ipv6 bgp neighbor 3ffe:1900:3::1 description 3Com IPv6 > ipv6 bgp neighbor 3ffe:1900:3::1 soft-reconfiguration inbound I think you need add this: ipv6 bgp neighbor 3ffe:1900:3::1route-map set-nexthop out route-map set-nexthop permit 10 match ipv6 address all set ipv6 next-hop local fe80::xxxx:xxxx set ipv6 next-hop global 3ffe:xxxx:xxxx::x set ip next-hop 206.82.192.10 ------------------------- Kasparavicius Andrius ________________________________________________________________________ http://www.andrius.org ICQ:17701001 tel.: +370 87 25630 nick: Casper AND-RIPE AND-6BONE From rzm@icm.edu.pl Thu Sep 21 14:39:21 2000 From: rzm@icm.edu.pl (Rafal Maszkowski) Date: Thu, 21 Sep 2000 15:39:21 +0200 Subject: routing tools?? In-Reply-To: ; from louis@trapezoid.com on Tue, Sep 19, 2000 at 06:31:59PM -0400 References: Message-ID: <20000921153920.E6701@burza.icm.edu.pl> On Tue, Sep 19, 2000 at 06:31:59PM -0400, Louis Zuckerman wrote: > Why would I use one of Zebra, MRT, or BIRD over the others? Does one have > some special-ness that the others lack? Zebra has very flexible filters. R. -- W iskier krzesaniu ¿ywem/Materia³ to rzecz g³ówna From fink@es.net Thu Sep 21 17:34:29 2000 From: fink@es.net (Bob Fink) Date: Thu, 21 Sep 2000 09:34:29 -0700 Subject: 6bone pTLA 3FFE:80B0::/28 allocated to BELNET-BE Message-ID: <4.3.1.2.20000921092245.02d62fa0@imap2.es.net> BELNET-BE has been allocated pTLA 3FFE:80B0::/28 having finished its 2-week review period with no negative comments. Note that it will take a short while for their inet6num object to show up as they have to create it. However, their registration is listed on: Thanks, Bob From KEITHT@hthk.com Sat Sep 23 02:12:52 2000 From: KEITHT@hthk.com (Keith Tang (HTHK - Engineer II, NW3G)) Date: Sat, 23 Sep 2000 09:12:52 +0800 Subject: FW: ipv6 testing Message-ID: HI: I try to ask the people how to join the 6Bone group, however none of them can give me instructions. I read over the 6bone hookup Info, but I still not sure what is the first step to do. Could you give me some idea of it? Regards, Keith Tang ---------- From: Neil Levine [SMTP:levine@uk.clara.net] Sent: Friday, September 22, 2000 10:19 PM To: Keith Tang (HTHK - Engineer II, NW3G) Subject: Re: ipv6 testing On Fri, Sep 22, 2000 at 06:11:31PM +0800, Keith Tang (HTHK - Engineer II, NW3G) said: > I reach your site by searching How to setup Ipv6 from 6bone. I hope you can > give me some idea how to start this project. What kinds of hardware do I > need? What should I prepare for ? > I really want to join the team as you. Looking forward to hear from you. I am just one of many ISPs who are on the 6Bone. For general information you should read http://www.6bone.net/6bone_hookup.html and then contact your nearest upstream who can allocate you some IPv^ 6bone address space. Neil -- ------------------------ |o| |o| ------------------------------- Neil Levine ClaraNet Ltd levine@uk.clara.net http://www.clara.net -------------------------------------------------------------------- From jguthrie@brokersys.com Sat Sep 23 06:42:36 2000 From: jguthrie@brokersys.com (Jonathan Guthrie) Date: Sat, 23 Sep 2000 00:42:36 -0500 (CDT) Subject: FW: ipv6 testing In-Reply-To: Message-ID: On Sat, 23 Sep 2000, Keith Tang (HTHK - Engineer II, NW3G) wrote: > I try to ask the people how to join the 6Bone group, however none of > them can give me instructions. I read over the 6bone hookup Info, but I > still not sure what is the first step to do. Could you give me some idea of > it? The first step is to gather the answers to some simple questions: What computer will be your endpoint of the connecting you to the 6bone? What software will you run on that computer? How do you configure it to connect to the 6bone? Where will the other end of the tunnel be? There are other questions to answer, but those will do for now. My answers were "an old 486 I had sitting around doing nothing", "Debian GNU/Linux 2.2", "rtfm", and "Sprint, if they'll have me." I wrote the contact at Sprint asking if he'd give me a tunnel and he said "yes". I installed the software and configured it (incorrectly, as it turned out) and installed it on the LAN where the router going to Sprint was. Then, I had Sprint bring their end up. I then fiddled with settings and stuff (and asked some questions on the debian-ipv6 mailing list) and got to actually work properly. I then got a workstation running on the LAN (hey! Did you know that the Mozilla M-17 talkback build for Linux-i386 works with IPv6 "out of the box"?) and set up a couple of downstream tunnels (because I do most of my work from elsewhere) and I'm now working on getting the DNS functionality working. (The problem appears to be an ancient named executable, which I'm working on.) I hope this helps. Don't worry if it raises questions. At this stage, questions are all you got. -- Jonathan Guthrie (jguthrie@brokersys.com) Brokersys +281-580-3358 http://www.brokersys.com/ 12703 Veterans Memorial #106, Houston, TX 77014, USA From tv@pobox.com Sat Sep 23 22:49:30 2000 From: tv@pobox.com (Todd Vierling) Date: Sat, 23 Sep 2000 17:49:30 -0400 (EDT) Subject: Tunnel request (24.31.102.19, Atlanta GA) In-Reply-To: Message-ID: On Fri, 15 Sep 2000, Todd Vierling wrote: : I am trying to find someone to carry a relatively low usage tunnel and : provide a delegation of as small as /124. OK, cancel my request. My application is not going to be as turnaround-time-sensitive as originally thought, and Nick Sayer has keyed me in on the fact that there are publicly advertised 2002::/16 routes on the 6bone now (so I can just hook up my 6to4 tunnel to any public gateway). Mmm, autotunnelling. Thanks for your offers! -- -- Todd Vierling (tv@pobox.com) From KEITHT@hthk.com Mon Sep 25 02:44:32 2000 From: KEITHT@hthk.com (Keith Tang (HTHK - Engineer II, NW3G)) Date: Mon, 25 Sep 2000 09:44:32 +0800 Subject: ipv6 testing Message-ID: Hi : Thank you for replying my Email. 1. I use windows 2000 and Linux 6.2 be my end-point connection to 6 bone 2. For the software, I am not quite sure what your meaning. I use IE to connect to the internet, Sometimes FTP.......... Any different?? 3. Connecting to the 6bone, I thing I should have a IPV6 address. How can I get it? Or I should get a Traditional Ipv4 address first, then convert it to IPV6 4. My location is Hong Kong, However, I know none of ISP in Hong Kong supporting IPV6 now. Is this a problem?. I have a windows2000 PC at home , with a cisco router 1401 and its password, connecting to a ISP by Leased Line With Real IPV4. So I want to use this windows 2000 PC connecting to my office Linux 6.2 by ipv6 address. 5. What is the function of 6bone? Thank you very much. Keith Tang ---------- From: Keith Tang (HTHK - Engineer II, NW3G) [SMTP:KEITHT@hthk.com] Sent: Saturday, September 23, 2000 9:13 AM To: '6bone@isi.edu' Subject: FW: ipv6 testing HI: I try to ask the people how to join the 6Bone group, however none of them can give me instructions. I read over the 6bone hookup Info, but I still not sure what is the first step to do. Could you give me some idea of it? Regards, Keith Tang ---------- From: Neil Levine [SMTP:levine@uk.clara.net] Sent: Friday, September 22, 2000 10:19 PM To: Keith Tang (HTHK - Engineer II, NW3G) Subject: Re: ipv6 testing On Fri, Sep 22, 2000 at 06:11:31PM +0800, Keith Tang (HTHK - Engineer II, NW3G) said: > I reach your site by searching How to setup Ipv6 from 6bone. I hope you can > give me some idea how to start this project. What kinds of hardware do I > need? What should I prepare for ? > I really want to join the team as you. Looking forward to hear from you. I am just one of many ISPs who are on the 6Bone. For general information you should read http://www.6bone.net/6bone_hookup.html and then contact your nearest upstream who can allocate you some IPv^ 6bone address space. Neil -- ------------------------ |o| |o| ------------------------------- Neil Levine ClaraNet Ltd levine@uk.clara.net http://www.clara.net -------------------------------------------------------------------- From jason@jax-inc.com Mon Sep 25 06:48:22 2000 From: jason@jax-inc.com (Jason Bogin) Date: Mon, 25 Sep 2000 01:48:22 -0400 Subject: ipv6 testing Message-ID: <71760B58DB78D111BF3D00C0F01783591AF044@WEB_SERVER> Hi, In regard to connecting yourself to the office... You need an IPv4 to IPv6 gateway connection. On your Cisco router, you will create a virtual interface with an IPv6 address. The router will encapsulate the IPv6 data into IPv4 packets to a direct gateway into the 6bone. At the gateway, the IPv4 packet will be stripped off and you should be on the 6bone from there. I did research on IPv6 in December for the University of North Florida. The project was to connect their network to the 6bone. I accomplished this by using the IPv4 Internet to the Sprintlink IPv6 gateway in Virginia. A Cisco 2501 router was used to tunnel although, your router will suffice. Here's the Cisco router configuration: http://www.jax-inc.com/IPv6/Cisco2511-IPv6.txt I hope this helps out... Thanks, Jason S. Bogin VP of Network Services PremiumCHAT.com jbogin@premiumchat.com -----Original Message----- From: Keith Tang (HTHK - Engineer II, NW3G) To: '6bone@isi.edu'; Keith Tang (HTHK - Engineer II, NW3G) Sent: 9/24/00 9:44 PM Subject: RE: ipv6 testing Hi : Thank you for replying my Email. 1. I use windows 2000 and Linux 6.2 be my end-point connection to 6 bone 2. For the software, I am not quite sure what your meaning. I use IE to connect to the internet, Sometimes FTP.......... Any different?? 3. Connecting to the 6bone, I thing I should have a IPV6 address. How can I get it? Or I should get a Traditional Ipv4 address first, then convert it to IPV6 4. My location is Hong Kong, However, I know none of ISP in Hong Kong supporting IPV6 now. Is this a problem?. I have a windows2000 PC at home , with a cisco router 1401 and its password, connecting to a ISP by Leased Line With Real IPV4. So I want to use this windows 2000 PC connecting to my office Linux 6.2 by ipv6 address. 5. What is the function of 6bone? Thank you very much. Keith Tang ---------- From: Keith Tang (HTHK - Engineer II, NW3G) [SMTP:KEITHT@hthk.com] Sent: Saturday, September 23, 2000 9:13 AM To: '6bone@isi.edu' Subject: FW: ipv6 testing HI: I try to ask the people how to join the 6Bone group, however none of them can give me instructions. I read over the 6bone hookup Info, but I still not sure what is the first step to do. Could you give me some idea of it? Regards, Keith Tang ---------- From: Neil Levine [SMTP:levine@uk.clara.net] Sent: Friday, September 22, 2000 10:19 PM To: Keith Tang (HTHK - Engineer II, NW3G) Subject: Re: ipv6 testing On Fri, Sep 22, 2000 at 06:11:31PM +0800, Keith Tang (HTHK - Engineer II, NW3G) said: > I reach your site by searching How to setup Ipv6 from 6bone. I hope you can > give me some idea how to start this project. What kinds of hardware do I > need? What should I prepare for ? > I really want to join the team as you. Looking forward to hear from you. I am just one of many ISPs who are on the 6Bone. For general information you should read http://www.6bone.net/6bone_hookup.html and then contact your nearest upstream who can allocate you some IPv^ 6bone address space. Neil -- ------------------------ |o| |o| ------------------------------- Neil Levine ClaraNet Ltd levine@uk.clara.net http://www.clara.net -------------------------------------------------------------------- From KEITHT@hthk.com Mon Sep 25 07:42:07 2000 From: KEITHT@hthk.com (Keith Tang (HTHK - Engineer II, NW3G)) Date: Mon, 25 Sep 2000 14:42:07 +0800 Subject: IPV6 address Message-ID: Hi My location is in Hong Kong. I know none of ISP in Hong Kong supporting IPV6 now. Is this a problem to connect to 6 bone?. I have a windows2000 PC at home , with a cisco router 1401 and, connecting to a ISP by Leased Line With Real IPV4. So I want to use this windows 2000 PC to connect to my office Linux 6.2 by ipv6 address, Could you tell me where I can get IPV6 address ? Regards, Keith Tang From psb@ast.cam.ac.uk Mon Sep 25 10:20:09 2000 From: psb@ast.cam.ac.uk (Peter Bunclark) Date: Mon, 25 Sep 2000 10:20:09 +0100 (BST) Subject: IPV6 address In-Reply-To: Message-ID: Look at http://www.cs-ipv6.lancs.ac.uk/ipv6/6Bone/Whois/DEVA.html ipv6-site DEVA origin AS4058 LINKAGENET descr Deva.net descr Tsuen Wan, Hong Kong country HK - HONG KONG prefix 3FFE:C00:8008::/48 Aggregatable Global Unicast Address TLA-ID: 0x1ffe, Sub-TLA: 0x180 6Bone 6BONE:CISCO:DEVA: application ping 6bone-router.deva.net application ping ipv6.deva.net application ftp ftp://ipv6.deva.net tunnels type source dest dest site dest prefix protocol comment IPv6 in IPv4 203.85.103.1 6bone-router.deva.net 192.31.7.104 eng-ios-dirtylab-gw.cisco.com CISCO 3FFE:C00::/24 STATIC IPv6 in IPv4 203.85.103.1 6bone-router.deva.net 203.72.242.20 NCU-TW 3FFE:3600:5::/48 STATIC contact AKH18 Operational since December 2, 1997. Willing to add new tunnels upon request. mnt-by DEVA-NOC changed avatar@deva.net 19th September 1998 From brusso@phys.hawaii.edu Mon Sep 25 10:44:01 2000 From: brusso@phys.hawaii.edu (Brian Russo) Date: Sun, 24 Sep 2000 23:44:01 -1000 Subject: ipv6 testing In-Reply-To: ; from KEITHT@hthk.com on Mon, Sep 25, 2000 at 09:44:32AM +0800 References: Message-ID: <20000924234401.B24063@uhhepr.phys.hawaii.edu> On Mon, Sep 25, 2000 at 09:44:32AM +0800, Keith Tang (HTHK - Engineer II, NW3G) wrote: > > Hi : > Thank you for replying my Email. > 1. I use windows 2000 and Linux 6.2 be my end-point connection to 6 > bone > > 2. For the software, I am not quite sure what your meaning. I use IE to > connect to the internet, Sometimes FTP.......... Any different?? > > 3. Connecting to the 6bone, I thing I should have a IPV6 address. How > can I get it? > Or I should get a Traditional Ipv4 address first, > then convert it to IPV6 > > 4. My location is Hong Kong, However, I know none of ISP in Hong Kong > supporting IPV6 now. Is this a problem?. I have a windows2000 PC at home , > with a cisco router 1401 and its password, connecting to a ISP by Leased > Line With Real IPV4. So I want to use this windows 2000 PC connecting to my > office Linux 6.2 by ipv6 address. I take it by "Linux 6.2" you mean RHS Linux 6.2 Linux kernels 2.2.x and 2.4.x (still unreleased, but quite useable) support IP6 (enable experimental options when you're confing the kernel prior to build) Microsoft Research has an experimental IP6 implementation http://research.microsoft.com/msripv6/ As far as hooking up to the 6bone, http://6bone.net/6bone_hookup.html is something you should probably read. That and asking the friendly people on this list :) > > 5. What is the function of 6bone? The 6bone is an operational ip6 testbed. basically to work out the kinks, and get people used to ip6 before major deployment. For more info check http://6bone.net > > > Thank you very much. > > Keith Tang > > - brian. -- +-----------------------------------------------------------+ | Brian Russo (808) 957 2333 | Unix Staff: University of Hawaii High Energy Physics Group + Assume a spherical cow of uniform density. From kmalick@mitre.org Mon Sep 25 18:34:12 2000 From: kmalick@mitre.org (Kristin Malick) Date: Mon, 25 Sep 2000 13:34:12 -0400 Subject: Request for ANSNET info Message-ID: <39CF8C94.A5165AD1@mitre.org> This is a multi-part message in MIME format. --------------9D825BCB8176469696C41484 Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit Hello All, I have determined that the pTLA ANSNET is topologically the best for my site, but when I tried to contact ANSNET using the info at http://whois.6bone.net/cgi-bin/whois?ansnet, both emails bounced back and the phone number is no longer connected. Does anyone have current contact information for ANSNET? All other sites I tested have relatively greater delays. Thanks, Kristin --------------9D825BCB8176469696C41484 Content-Type: text/x-vcard; charset=us-ascii; name="kmalick.vcf" Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit Content-Description: Card for Kristin Malick Content-Disposition: attachment; filename="kmalick.vcf" begin:vcard n:Malick;Kristin x-mozilla-html:FALSE org:The MITRE Corportation;W072 adr:;;12 Christopher Way;Eatontown;NJ;07724; version:2.1 email;internet:kmalick@mitre.org title:Communications Engineer note;quoted-printable:Telephone: 732.427.2452=0D=0A=0D=0AVoicemail: 732.544.6404 fn:Kristin Malick end:vcard --------------9D825BCB8176469696C41484-- From brusso@phys.hawaii.edu Tue Sep 26 00:47:30 2000 From: brusso@phys.hawaii.edu (Brian Russo) Date: Mon, 25 Sep 2000 13:47:30 -1000 Subject: Request for ANSNET info In-Reply-To: <39CF8C94.A5165AD1@mitre.org>; from kmalick@mitre.org on Mon, Sep 25, 2000 at 01:34:12PM -0400 References: <39CF8C94.A5165AD1@mitre.org> Message-ID: <20000925134730.C7499@uhhepi.phys.hawaii.edu> On Mon, Sep 25, 2000 at 01:34:12PM -0400, Kristin Malick wrote: > Hello All, > > I have determined that the pTLA ANSNET is topologically the best for my > site, but when I tried to contact ANSNET using the info at > http://whois.6bone.net/cgi-bin/whois?ansnet, both emails bounced back > and the phone number is no longer connected. Does anyone have current > contact information for ANSNET? All other sites I tested have > relatively greater delays. > > Thanks, > Kristin ANSNET is now owned by MCI WorldCom. Their networks never completely merged.. but I suggest you contact UUNET IPv6 Operations.. http://whois.6bone.net/cgi-bin/whois?uunet good luck.. - brian. -- +-----------------------------------------------------------+ | Brian Russo (808) 957 2333 | Unix Staff: University of Hawaii High Energy Physics Group + Assume a spherical cow of uniform density. From fink@es.net Tue Sep 26 15:04:59 2000 From: fink@es.net (Bob Fink) Date: Tue, 26 Sep 2000 07:04:59 -0700 Subject: 6bone pTLA 3FFE:80C0::/28 allocated to STEALTH Message-ID: <4.3.1.2.20000926070224.00b63b98@imap2.es.net> STEALTH has been allocated pTLA 3FFE:80C0::/28 having finished its 2-week review period with no negative comments. Note that it will take a short while for their inet6num object to show up as they have to create it. However, their registration is listed on: Thanks, Bob From jguthrie@brokersys.com Wed Sep 27 00:59:44 2000 From: jguthrie@brokersys.com (Jonathan Guthrie) Date: Tue, 26 Sep 2000 18:59:44 -0500 (CDT) Subject: What is the best way to test IPv6 DNS Message-ID: I've nearly finished my initial IPv6 setup. In fact, just about the only thing left is the Forward and Reverse-DNS. The forward seems to work okay (at least www.ipv6.brokersys.com resolves to the correct address and a browser that goes there loads Debian's default web content, which is what's there) but I'm kind of puzzled about how to test the reverse DNS. With IPv4, I'd use nslookup, but I can't seem to make nslookup do anything useful with IPv6 addresses. Can someone give me a hint? -- Jonathan Guthrie (jguthrie@brokersys.com) Brokersys +281-580-3358 http://www.brokersys.com/ 12703 Veterans Memorial #106, Houston, TX 77014, USA From ksbn@kt.co.kr Wed Sep 27 02:04:43 2000 From: ksbn@kt.co.kr (ksb) Date: Wed, 27 Sep 2000 10:04:43 +0900 Subject: 6TAP References: <4.3.1.2.20000926070224.00b63b98@imap2.es.net> Message-ID: <39D147AB.2CF63B53@kt.co.kr> Message
Dear  Bob Fink

How are you?

My company (Korea Telecom) operates KOREN
(KOrea Research and Experimental Network).
My company URL is :
http://www.koreatelecom.com/

KOREN is based on ATM technology for OSI layer 2.
Korea Telecom has the IPv6 sTLA.
(APNIC: [KIX-KR]  2001:220::/35)

KOREN IPv6 network is constructed using the native
ATM method.

What kind of procedures are needed for KOREN NOC?
(to connect with 6TAP)

Best Regards

Sahng-Beom Kim
Member of Technical Staff
(IPv6 researcher)


--
  Kim, Sahng-Beom / Korea Telecom
  TEL :    +82-42-870-8322
  FAX :    +82-42-870-8279
  E-mail :  ksbn@kt.co.kr
--



From jcomeau@dialtoneinternet.net Wed Sep 27 03:43:55 2000 From: jcomeau@dialtoneinternet.net (John Comeau) Date: Tue, 26 Sep 2000 22:43:55 -0400 Subject: stuck for a week at netstat -A inet6 -an References: <39A464E7.44796E99@dialtoneinternet.net> Message-ID: <39D15EEB.A2C53A43@dialtoneinternet.net> Finally figured out the problem - when I edited the specfile, I added --with-inet6 in the COMMENTS ONLY, not in the actual options. Duh. Now that I have good RPMs, they are available, at least for now, from http://ipv6.dialtoneinternet.net. If any of you already on the 6bone can reach the site at http://3ffe:b00:c18:1fff::2bd, its temporary address, I'd like to know about it. Thanks! John Comeau wrote: > > I've been following the IPV6 Howto, or at least I think I have, and I can't > seem to get past this roadblock. I've got xinetd set up with all the services, > such as finger, daytime, echo, etc, and don't see any listening on IPV6 > addresses. And I get connection refused on all inet6 ports. 'tail > /var/log/messages' doesn't show any reason why. > > I'm probably doing something very stupid... flame away, but try and squeeze > some useful tips in too 8^) - jc > > [root@cto jc]# telnet ::1 echo > Trying ::1... > telnet: connect to address ::1: Connection > refused -- John Comeau - Chief Technology Officer Dialtone Internet - Extremely Fast Web Systems 954-581-0097x113 fax://954-581-7629 jcomeau@dialtoneinternet.net http://www.dialtoneinternet.net "We are a Responsible Internet Provider - see http://risp.org" From jim@thehousleys.net Wed Sep 27 04:09:58 2000 From: jim@thehousleys.net (James Housley) Date: Tue, 26 Sep 2000 23:09:58 -0400 Subject: What is the best way to test IPv6 DNS References: Message-ID: <39D16506.1BDE6DB6@thehousleys.net> This is a multi-part message in MIME format. --------------8D1E1E780BDCCC68510FBD52 Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit Jonathan Guthrie wrote: > > I've nearly finished my initial IPv6 setup. In fact, just about the only > thing left is the Forward and Reverse-DNS. The forward seems to work okay > (at least www.ipv6.brokersys.com resolves to the correct address and a > browser that goes there loads Debian's default web content, which is > what's there) but I'm kind of puzzled about how to test the reverse DNS. > > With IPv4, I'd use nslookup, but I can't seem to make nslookup do anything > useful with IPv6 addresses. Can someone give me a hint? Attached is a simple perl script that will help. The top of the file documents it. Jim -- In God we Trust -- all others must submit an X.509 certificate. -- Charles Forsythe --------------8D1E1E780BDCCC68510FBD52 Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii; name="ip6int" Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit Content-Disposition: inline; filename="ip6int" #!/usr/bin/perl -w # # Convert valid IPv6 address to ip6.int PTR value. Convert valid # IPv4 address to in-addr.arpa PTR value. Anything not valid is # simply printed as is. Handles :: notation and embedded IPv4 # addresses. If the address is followed by /n, the PTR is # truncated to n bits. # # If n is negative, the host part of the address is printed instead. # This is useful for generating zone files. # # Examples: # nslookup -type=any `ip6_int 3ffe::203.34.97.6` looks up # 6.0.1.6.2.2.b.c.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.e.f.f.3.ip6.int # nslookup -type=any `ip6_int fe80::b432:e6ff/10` looks up # 2.e.f.ip6.int # nslookup -type=any `ip6_int ::127.0.0.1` looks up # 1.0.0.0.0.0.f.7.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.ip6.int # nslookup -type=any `ip6_int 127.0.0.1` looks up # 1.0.0.127.in-addr.arpa # nslookup -type=any `ip6_int 127.0.0.1/8` looks up # 127.in-addr.arpa # # Copyright 1997 Keith Owens . GPL. # Negative /n added by Magnus Ahltorp 1998-06-06. # require 5; use strict; use integer; my $v6; if ($#ARGV >= 0 && ($v6 = ($ARGV[0] =~ m;^([0-9a-fA-f:]+)(?::(\d+\.\d+\.\d+\.\d+))?(?:/(-)?(\d+))?$;)) || $ARGV[0] =~ m;^(\d+\.\d+\.\d+\.\d+)(?:/(-)?(\d+))?$;) { my $valid = 1; if ($v6) { my (@chunk) = split(/:/, $1, 99); my $negative = defined($3); my $mask = $4; if ($2) { my (@v4) = split(/\./, $2); $valid = ($v4[0] <= 255 && $v4[1] <= 255 && $v4[2] <= 255 && $v4[3] <= 255); if ($valid) { push(@chunk, sprintf("%x%02x", $v4[0], $v4[1])); push(@chunk, sprintf("%x%02x", $v4[2], $v4[3])); } } my $pattern = ""; if ($valid) { foreach (@chunk) { $pattern .= /^$/ ? 'b' : 'c'; } if ($pattern =~ /^bbc+$/) { @chunk = (0, 0, @chunk[2..$#chunk]); @chunk = (0, @chunk) while ($#chunk < 7); } elsif ($pattern =~ /^c+bb$/) { @chunk = (@chunk[0..$#chunk-2], 0, 0); push(@chunk, 0) while ($#chunk < 7); } elsif ($pattern =~ /^c+bc+$/) { my @left; push(@left, shift(@chunk)) while ($chunk[0] ne ""); shift(@chunk); push(@left, 0); push(@left, 0) while (($#left + $#chunk) < 6); @chunk = (@left, @chunk); } $valid = $#chunk == 7; } my $ip6int = "ip6.int"; my $i; if ($valid) { foreach (@chunk) { $i = hex($_); if ($i > 65535) { $valid = 0; } else { $ip6int = sprintf("%x.%x.%x.%x.", ($i) & 0xf, ($i >> 4) & 0xf, ($i >> 8) & 0xf, ($i >> 12) & 0xf) . $ip6int; } } } if ($valid && defined($mask)) { $valid = ($mask =~ /^\d+$/ && $mask <= 128); if ($valid) { if ($negative) { $ip6int = substr($ip6int, 0, int((128-$mask+3)/4)*2-1); } else { $ip6int = substr($ip6int, int((128-$mask)/4)*2); } if ($mask &= 3) { if ($negative) { $i = hex(substr($ip6int, -1, 1)); $i &= (15 >> $mask); substr($ip6int, -1, 1) = sprintf("%x", $i); } else { $i = hex(substr($ip6int, 0, 1)); $i >>= (4-$mask); substr($ip6int, 0, 1) = sprintf("%x", $i); } } } } $ARGV[0] = $ip6int if ($valid); } else { # v4 my (@v4) = split(/\./, $1); my $negative = defined($2); my $mask = $3; $valid = ($v4[0] <= 255 && $v4[1] <= 255 && $v4[2] <= 255 && $v4[3] <= 255); my $v4 = hex(sprintf("%02X%02X%02X%02X", @v4)); if ($valid && defined($mask)) { $valid = ($mask =~ /^\d+$/ && $mask <= 32); if ($valid) { if ($negative) { no integer; # unsigned shift please $v4 = $v4 & ((~0) >> $mask); use integer; # back to normal } else { $v4 = $v4 & ((~0) << (32-$mask)); } $v4[0] = ($v4 >> 24) & 255; $v4[1] = ($v4 >> 16) & 255; $v4[2] = ($v4 >> 8) & 255; $v4[3] = $v4 & 255; } } else { $mask = 32; } if ($valid) { if ($negative) { my $i = 4 - int((32-$mask+7) / 8); shift(@v4) while ($i--); $ARGV[0] = join('.', reverse(@v4)); } else { my $i = 4 - int(($mask+7) / 8); pop(@v4) while ($i--); $ARGV[0] = join('.', reverse(@v4)); $ARGV[0] .= '.' if ($ARGV[0] ne ""); $ARGV[0] .= 'in-addr.arpa'; } } } } print "@ARGV\n"; --------------8D1E1E780BDCCC68510FBD52-- From tony@lava.net Wed Sep 27 05:34:53 2000 From: tony@lava.net (Antonio Querubin) Date: Tue, 26 Sep 2000 18:34:53 -1000 (HST) Subject: stuck for a week at netstat -A inet6 -an In-Reply-To: <39D15EEB.A2C53A43@dialtoneinternet.net> Message-ID: On Tue, 26 Sep 2000, John Comeau wrote: > Finally figured out the problem - when I edited the specfile, I added > --with-inet6 in the COMMENTS ONLY, not in the actual options. Duh. Now that I > have good RPMs, they are available, at least for now, from > http://ipv6.dialtoneinternet.net. If any of you already on the 6bone can reach > the site at http://3ffe:b00:c18:1fff::2bd, its temporary address, I'd like to > know about it. Thanks! We can traceroute to it from here: $ traceroute6 3ffe:b00:c18:1fff::2bd traceroute to 3ffe:b00:c18:1fff::2bd (3ffe:b00:c18:1fff::2bd) from 3ffe:2900:d:a::2, 30 hops max, 16 byte packets 1 3ffe:2900:d:a::1 (3ffe:2900:d:a::1) 135.137 ms * 140.942 ms 2 3ffe:b00:c18::e (3ffe:b00:c18::e) 177.132 ms 178.156 ms 180.479 ms 3 www.6bone.net (3ffe:b00:c18:1::10) 177.809 ms 179.93 ms 180.013 ms 4 jojo.de.freenet6.net (3ffe:b00:c18:1fff::2bd) 234.651 ms 240.834 ms 242.378 ms From andrius@andrius.org Wed Sep 27 10:16:17 2000 From: andrius@andrius.org (Andrius Kasparavicius) Date: Wed, 27 Sep 2000 11:16:17 +0200 (GMT-2) Subject: traceroute6 to AIX 4.3 Message-ID: hello six'ers maybe you know, why AIX 4.3 doesn't reply to my traceroute6? # tracepath zemrsn.edu.eu.org 1?: [LOCALHOST] pmtu 1500 1: 195.22.177.70 60ms 2?: 194.176.60.202 reached Resume: pmtu 1500 hops 2 back 2 # tracepath6 zemrsn.edu.eu.org 1?: [LOCALHOST] pmtu 1480 1: 3ffe:b00:c18::3b 70ms 2: no reply 3: no reply..and so on.. # ping -c 1 zemrsn.edu.eu.org PING zemrsn.edu.eu.org (194.176.60.202) from 195.22.177.68 : 56 data bytes 64 bytes from 194.176.60.202: icmp_seq=0 ttl=254 time=17.5 ms --- zemrsn.edu.eu.org ping statistics --- 1 packets transmitted, 1 packets received, 0% packet loss round-trip min/avg/max = 17.5/17.5/17.5 ms # ping6 -c 1 zemrsn.edu.eu.org PING zemrsn.edu.eu.org(zemrsn.edu.eu.org) 56 data bytes 64 bytes from zemrsn.edu.eu.org: icmp_seq=0 time=25.7 ms --- zemrsn.edu.eu.org ping6 statistics --- 1 packets transmitted, 1 packets received, 0% packet loss round-trip min/avg/max = 25.7/25.7/25.7 ms maybe AIX doesn't reply to inet6 traceroute, because 4.3 version still can't forward inet6 address family packets? ------------------------- Kasparavicius Andrius ________________________________________________________________________ http://www.andrius.org ICQ:17701001 tel.: +370 87 25630 nick: Casper AND-RIPE AND-6BONE From kontogia@cti.gr Thu Sep 28 09:31:30 2000 From: kontogia@cti.gr (Kontogianni Vicky) Date: Thu, 28 Sep 2000 11:31:30 +0300 Subject: Web server s/w for Solaris 2.8 Message-ID: <000201c02926$8179c0b0$a3818c96@kontogianni> Hello, do you know what is the available ipv6 Web server software for Solaris 2.8? Does the Apache server, included in the distribution, support ipv6?? Thanks in advance for the responses, Vicky Kontogianni Network Technologies Sector Computer Technology Institute Patras - GREECE Tel. +30 61 960377 e-mail: kontogia@cti.gr From BMcNamara@zama.net Thu Sep 28 18:31:37 2000 From: BMcNamara@zama.net (Bradley W. McNamara) Date: Thu, 28 Sep 2000 10:31:37 -0700 Subject: Web server s/w for Solaris 2.8 References: <000201c02926$8179c0b0$a3818c96@kontogianni> Message-ID: <39D38079.A1A8D7E8@zama.net> Vicky, The Apache server included with Solaris 8 does not support IPv6. You can get Apache 1.3.12, and a patch for it from ftp://ftp.kame.net/pub/kame.misc/, to enable IPv6. If you want, I have a source distribution with the patch already applied to the source code at http://www.zama6.net, or, http://203.142.143.10. Also, I have a pre-built Solaris 8 binary package that you can apply to your system. This package was built using GNU gcc and has been tested on IPv6. There are other applications for download on this server, and more will be added as I find them and install/test them on IPv6. Let me know if you have anything to add to the applications. Brad McNamara ZAMA Networks Kontogianni Vicky wrote: > Hello, > > do you know what is the available ipv6 Web server software for Solaris 2.8? > Does the Apache server, included in the distribution, support ipv6?? > > Thanks in advance for the responses, > > Vicky Kontogianni > Network Technologies Sector > Computer Technology Institute > Patras - GREECE > > Tel. +30 61 960377 > e-mail: kontogia@cti.gr From xavier@euro.net Thu Sep 28 21:59:18 2000 From: xavier@euro.net (Xavier Mertens) Date: Thu, 28 Sep 2000 22:59:18 +0200 (MET DST) Subject: tcp_wrapper Message-ID: Hi *, I'm looking for a IPv6 tcp_wrapper. Any archive or package? (Linux & Solaris) X -- Xavier Mertens &Wanadoo Belgium "Contrary to popular belief, Unix is NOC Manager a subsidiary of userfriendly. It just happens to be XM1-6BONE XM3-RIPE France Telecom selective about who it makes friens with" From BMcNamara@zama.net Fri Sep 29 02:06:58 2000 From: BMcNamara@zama.net (Bradley W. McNamara) Date: Thu, 28 Sep 2000 18:06:58 -0700 Subject: tcp_wrapper References: Message-ID: <39D3EB32.8E6251C5@zama.net> Xavier, You can find the IPv6 tcp_wrapper source code at ftp://ftp/porcupine.org/pub/ipv6/tcp_wrappers_7.6-ipv6.1.tar.gz, or, you can download it at http://www.zama6.net, also. There is a Solaris package of it at http://www.zama6.net, also. Brad McNamara ZAMA Networks Xavier Mertens wrote: > Hi *, > > I'm looking for a IPv6 tcp_wrapper. Any archive or package? (Linux & Solaris) > > X > > -- > Xavier Mertens &Wanadoo Belgium "Contrary to popular belief, Unix is > NOC Manager a subsidiary of userfriendly. It just happens to be > XM1-6BONE XM3-RIPE France Telecom selective about who it makes friens with" From maurik@servidor.unam.mx Fri Sep 29 14:08:24 2000 From: maurik@servidor.unam.mx (Mauricio =?iso-8859-1?Q?Hern=E1ndez=20Garc=EDa?=) Date: Fri, 29 Sep 2000 08:08:24 -0500 Subject: tcp_wrapper References: Message-ID: <39D49448.1835F2FC@servidor.unam.mx> > I'm looking for a IPv6 tcp_wrapper. Any archive or package? (Linux & Solaris) There is a version of tcp wrappers for IPv6 ftp://ftp.porcupine.org/pub/security/index.html -- Mauricio Hernandez Garcia Prospeccion e Innovacion Tecnologica Direccion General de Computo Academico, UNAM 5622-8316 From fink@es.net Fri Sep 29 15:51:11 2000 From: fink@es.net (Bob Fink) Date: Fri, 29 Sep 2000 07:51:11 -0700 Subject: MIMOS-MY pTLA Request Message-ID: <4.3.1.2.20000929074756.0307b538@imap2.es.net> MIMOS-MY requests a pTLA (see their request below). The comment period will close on 16 October. Comments to me or the list. Thanks, Bob >Date: Fri, 29 Sep 2000 15:28:09 +0800 (MYT) >From: Raja Azlina Raja Mahmood >To: fink@es.net >cc: ipv6-support@mimos.my >Subject: MIMOS-MY, pTLA Request > > >Hi Bob, > >This is Azlina from MIMOS, Malaysia requesting for the pTLA status >from 6bone. We hope we do meet the 6bone's requirements (refer >below). Please inform us if we miss anything. Thank you. > >regards, >~azlina >_______________________________________ >Guidelines for 6Bone pTLA sites > > >1. The pTLA Applicant must have a minimum of three (3) months > qualifying experience as a 6Bone end-site or pNLA transit. > During the entire qualifying period the Applicant must be > operationally providing the following: > ANSWER: We have been connected to the 6bone since july 4th 2000. > > > a. Fully maintained, up to date, 6Bone Registry entries for their > IPv6-site inet6num, mntner, and person objects, including each > tunnel that the Applicant has. >ANSWER: We do maintain an up-to-date 6bone registry with the following >entries: IPv6-site(mimos-my), mntner(mnt-mimos.my),inet6num >(2001:208:110::/44), nic-handle(rarm1-6bone) and all tunnels that >we have. > > > b. Fully maintained, and reliable, BGP4+ peering and connectivity > between the Applicant's boundary router and the appropriate > connection point into the 6Bone. This router must be IPv6 > pingable. This criteria is judged by members of the 6Bone > Operations Group at the time of the Applicant's pTLA request. >ANSWER: We maintain bgp4+ peering with singAREN(Singapore), dti(Japan) and >Viagenie(Canada). Do visit this site: >"http://www.cs-ipv6.lancs.ac.uk/ipv6/6bone/whois/bycountry.html#my" for >verification. The router is IPv6 pingable as well (router1.nel-ipv6. >mimos.my) with following addresses 2001:208:110:2::33 & 2001:208:110:1::2. > > > c. Fully maintained DNS forward (AAAA) and reverse (ip6.int) > entries for the Applicant's router(s) and at least one host > system. >ANSWER: We maintain our own IPv6 nameservers with its primary at >britney.nel-ipv6.mimos.my->2001:208:110:2::36 and secondary at >ricky.nel-ipv6.mimos.my->2001:208:110:2::39. We have few IPv6 hosts >that are IPv6 pingable, i.e. christina.nel-ipv6.mimos.my -> >2001:208:110:2::37(including the nameservers). Refer below: > > >dig ricky.nel-ipv6.mimos.my aaaa >.. >;; ANSWER SECTION: >ricky.nel-ipv6.mimos.my. 1D IN AAAA 2001:208:110:2::39 >. > > >dig >7.3.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.2.0.0.0.0.1.1.0.8.0.2.0.1.0.0.2.ip6.int >ptr > >;; ANSWERS: >7.3.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.2.0.0.0.0.1.1.0.8.0.2.0.1.0.0.2.ip6.int. 86400 >PTR christina.nel-IPv6.mimos.my. >.. > > > d. A fully maintained, and reliable, IPv6-accessible system > providing, at a mimimum, one or more web pages, describing the > Applicant's IPv6 services. This server must be IPv6 pingable. >ANSWER: Currently our IPv6 web server resides at http://www.nel-ipv6. >mimos.my(2001:208:110:2::39), that describes our IPv6 activity, which is >also IPv6 pingable. > > > > 2. The pTLA Applicant MUST have the ability and intent to provide > "production-quality" 6Bone backbone service. Applicants must > provide a statement and information in support of this claim. > This MUST include the following: >ANSWER: MIMOS Berhad do intend to provide "production-quality" 6bone >backbone service. > > > a. A support staff of two persons minimum, three preferable, with > person attributes registered for each in the IPv6-site object > for the pTLA applicant. >ANSWER: Our IPv6 support staffs are as followings: >1. Raja Azlina Raja Mahmood (ina@mimos.my) >2. Che Rohani Ishak (roha@mimos.my) >3. Mahizzan Mohd Fadzil (mahizzan@mimos.my). > > > b. A common mailbox for support contact purposes that all support > staff have acess to, pointed to with a notify attribute in the > IPv6-site object for the pTLA Applicant. >ANSWER: Our common mailbox: IPv6-support@mimos.my > > > 3. The pTLA Applicant MUST have a potential "user community" that > would be served by its becoming a pTLA, e.g., the Applicant is a > major provider of Internet service in a region, country, or > focus of interest. Applicant must provide a statement and > information in support this claim. >ANSWER: We are operating one of the largest ISPs in Malaysia. We have >more than 300K of subscribers and lease circuit community. We have been >operating this ISP service for more than 13 years. We also operate MYNIC >(Malaysian Network Information Centre - provides domain name registration >service) and MYCERT (Malaysian Computer Emergency Response Team - acts as >a point of reference in dealing with computer security incidents and >methods of preventions) that are serving Malaysian Internet community. > > > 4. The pTLA Applicant MUST commit to abide by the current 6Bone > operational rules and policies as they exist at time of its > application, and agree to abide by future 6Bone backbone > operational rules and policies as they evolve by consensus of the > 6Bone backbone and user community. >ANSWER: We hereby agree to abide to the 6bone operational rules and >policies. > From thejoker@infostream.ro Sat Sep 30 03:33:17 2000 From: thejoker@infostream.ro (Radu Malica) Date: Sat, 30 Sep 2000 04:33:17 +0200 Subject: ipv6 addressing Message-ID: <001b01c02a86$df7d77e0$2edce7c1@infostream.ro> Hi i have 2 ipv6 block addresses from some time now. i have studied ipv6 tunnels. on cisco on linux now i know them perfectly. But in despite of all RFC related to ipv6 i read, i can't understand how to allocate ipv6 addresses from my block for example i have 2001:600:4:80cf::/48 and a /64 from sprint 3FFE:2900:E004::/48 and i don't know how to give to my clients ipv6 tunnels and sub block addresses could anyone give me a hint? thanks a lot Radu Malica From john@dryfish.org Sat Sep 30 18:09:30 2000 From: john@dryfish.org (John Wright) Date: Sat, 30 Sep 2000 18:09:30 +0100 Subject: ipv6 addressing - non-routable equivalents? In-Reply-To: <001b01c02a86$df7d77e0$2edce7c1@infostream.ro>; from thejoker@infostream.ro on Sat, Sep 30, 2000 at 04:33:17AM +0200 References: <001b01c02a86$df7d77e0$2edce7c1@infostream.ro> Message-ID: <20000930180930.C18101@dryfish.org> Slightly related and I'm sure I'll sound like a complete novice. What's the equivalent of 192.168.x.y and 10.a.b.c for ipv6? I've been trying to get the autoallocated addresses that my OpenBSD box sets for the network interfaces and I think setting them to something proper might help. The problem I'm having is that I have to specify the outgoing interface for things like ping6 and ssh otherwise the packets appear to go nowhere. I've managed to get a freenet6 tunnel working okay though -- just my home network ain't happy. Those IPv6 RFCs are a bit of a brainful to understand. :) On Sat, Sep 30, 2000 at 04:33:17AM +0200, Radu Malica wrote: > Hi > > i have 2 ipv6 block addresses from some time now. i have studied ipv6 > tunnels. on cisco on linux now i know them perfectly. But in despite of all > RFC related to ipv6 i read, i can't understand how to allocate ipv6 > addresses from my block > > for example i have 2001:600:4:80cf::/48 > and a /64 from sprint 3FFE:2900:E004::/48 > > and i don't know how to give to my clients ipv6 tunnels and sub block > addresses > > could anyone give me a hint? > > thanks a lot > > Radu Malica > From bmanning@ISI.EDU Sat Sep 30 22:22:39 2000 From: bmanning@ISI.EDU (Bill Manning) Date: Sat, 30 Sep 2000 14:22:39 -0700 (PDT) Subject: ipv6 addressing - non-routable equivalents? In-Reply-To: <20000930180930.C18101@dryfish.org> from "John Wright" at Sep 30, 2000 06:09:30 PM Message-ID: <200009302122.OAA12141@zed.isi.edu> Two birds w/ one stone. ) There is no IPv6 equivalent of global, private address space as defined in RFC 1918. There is link-local and site-local, which might suit your purposes. ) Inverse DNS delegations are done the same way as in IPv4, with the delegations occuring on nibble bounds. If you have: 201:0600:0004:80cf::/48 and (remember) the bits from 65-128 are "reserved" for your MAC or e164 address, then you have /49 to /64 to carve up as subnets. 16 delegation points, e.g. the functional equivalant of an IPv4 /16. Does that help? % Slightly related and I'm sure I'll sound like a complete novice. % % What's the equivalent of 192.168.x.y and 10.a.b.c for ipv6? % On Sat, Sep 30, 2000 at 04:33:17AM +0200, Radu Malica wrote: % > Hi % > % > for example i have 2001:600:4:80cf::/48 % > and a /64 from sprint 3FFE:2900:E004::/48 % > % > and i don't know how to give to my clients ipv6 tunnels and sub block % > addresses % > -- --bill