After seeing the functionality of the IP6 tunnel that I acquired not
long ago. I decided to acquire a second tunnel for my 1:282/1031 node.
I should mention that due to some software issues I have decided to
once again merge 1:282/1031, 1:14/5, 1:14/0 into one system.
I have updated the DNS to reflect the new IPv6 address of 2001:470:1f10:133::2 for 1:282/1031 (bbs.ouijabrd.net) and 1:14/5 (ftn.region14.org).
On Wednesday July 31 2019 22:07, you wrote to All:
I see that it all ends on ::2. So you are using the tunnel endpoints for your nodes.
Are you aware that - if they are on the same LAN - you do not need a sepearate
tunnel for each node, but that you can have a routed subnet (/64 or /48) from he.net and use just one tunnel for all the nodes om your LAN?
Are you aware that - if they are on the same LAN - you do not need a
sepearate tunnel for each node, but that you can have a routed subnet
(/64 or /48) from he.net and use just one tunnel for all the nodes om
your LAN?
I had the understanding that the tunnel was related to a static v4 endpoint IP. Here each PC (FTN Node) has it's own static v4 IP. Are
you saying that a single tunnel can support multiple static v4 IP endpoints?
The tunnel does not "support" a static IPv4 endpoint. It is more the other way >around. A tunnel needs a public IPv4 address for its end point. The same publi
IPv4 address can be used for other purposes, such as a Fidonet Binkp server.
But it need not be. The fact that the tunnel is used to supply an IPv6 address >to the same binkd server is irrelevant. The binkp server can be on a different
IPv4 address than the tunnel servicing the IPOv6 part.
Yes, for a second tunnel, you need a different public IPv4 address for the end
point.
My point is: you probably do not need a second tunnel. A tunnel is a channel t
the rest of the world that can handle many IPv6 addresses. Just like an IPv4 router can make you connect many device to the IPv4 internet via a single channel, so can a tunnel for IPv6.
You can assign different IPv6 addresses to 1:282/1031 and 1:14/6 over one and the same tunnel.
How this is done and if it is "better" in your situation is another matter.
I am learning as I go here. :-) Now... If my line of reasoning is reasonable I could setup a tunnel to a reflashed router with a public
IP which would then service the IP's in use here.
| Sysop: | Weed Hopper |
|---|---|
| Location: | Clearwater, FL |
| Users: | 16 |
| Nodes: | 6 (0 / 6) |
| Uptime: | 16:14:35 |
| Calls: | 133 |
| Files: | 50,534 |
| D/L today: |
107 files (17,165K bytes) |
| Messages: | 326,105 |