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Consumer Grade - IPV6 Enabled Router Firewalls.
- Subject: Consumer Grade - IPV6 Enabled Router Firewalls.
- From: newton at internode.com.au (Mark Newton)
- Date: Thu, 3 Dec 2009 23:38:56 +1030
- In-reply-to: <01f001ca7412$6f53d9c0$4dfb8d40$@com>
- References: <[email protected]> <[email protected]> <[email protected]> <01f001ca7412$6f53d9c0$4dfb8d40$@com>
On 03/12/2009, at 22:46, "TJ" <trejrco at gmail.com> wrote:
>> From: Mark Newton [mailto:newton at internode.com.au]
>> On 03/12/2009, at 9:51 AM, Dave Temkin wrote:
>>
>>> You're correct, out of the box there aren't many. The first
>>> couple that
>>> come to mind are the Apple Airport Express and Airport Extreme,
>>> but I
> don't
>>> believe Linksys/Netgear/etc. have support out of the box.
>>
>> The Apple products do 6to4 out of the box, but don't support v6
>> natively.
>
> FWIW - The (Cisco) Linksys 610N does (and perhaps others do?) the same
> amount of IPv6 the Airport Extreme does - 6to4, SLAAC - out of the
> box, by
> default. In fact, I am not sure you can turn it off ..
Yep -- which is worse than useless in the presence of a service
provider that's already offering dual-stack service.
"Here! Have a v6 address. We'll even give you a moderately large
prefix if you run a DHCPv6-PD client... Oh, what? You're going to
ignore all that and use a 6to4 gateway and pessimize the v6 routing
decisions we've made? And live in one /64 even though every man and
his dog reckons service providers ought to be handing out /56's or /
48's? Gee, glad we went to the effort..."
Sadly the easiest way for residential subscribers to get IPv6 on PPPoE
in 2009 is to put their CPE into "bridge" mode and run the PPPoE
client on a PC.
The vendors have really dropped the ball on this.
(glares at Cisco/Linksys)
- mark