Tunnel IPv6 requests to my IPv4 servers?

Kenyon Ralph kenyon at kenyonralph.com
Mon Nov 9 22:47:53 UTC 2009


On 2009-11-09T14:26:23-0800, Rudy <crapsh at monkeybrains.net> wrote:
> I got my first IPv6 from ARIN.  I set up my router and am
> successfully advertising my IPv6 block.  On my DNS server, I added
> an IPv6 IP, no problem (try pinging!  ns1.monkeybrains.net).  Now,
> I'd like to 'NAT' to some older boxes and not mess with actually
> putting IPv6 IPs on those boxes.  Say I had a box with running IPv4
> with: 69.147.83.40
> How would I 'nat' or 'gif' or 'tunnel' from a NAT box without
> putting any IPv6 on 69.147.83.40?
> 
> I want to have:
>  2607:f598:0:1::666 on my 'firewall' and have it tunnel to
> 69.147.83.40 or whatever....
> I've read this:
> http://www.freebsd.org/doc/en_US.ISO8859-1/books/handbook/network-ipv6.html
> But that seems more geared toward getting IPv6 on clients.

Are you trying to give the older boxes IPv6 connectivity or IPv4
connectivity to the Internet?

If IPv6, why not just give the older boxes IPv6 addresses? Seems to me
it would be a lot easier than messing with tunneling. They don't even
need globally routeable IPv4 addresses. Set up rtadvd on your router,
allow them to use their automatic IPv6 addresses (or set the addresses
manually, doesn't matter), and that should be it. It shouldn't be that
hard, since ease of setup is one of the things IPv6 is designed for. On
FreeBSD, ipv6_enable="YES" is probably all you need to do.

-- 
Kenyon Ralph
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