Date: Sun, 17 Nov 2002 10:29:40 -0600 From: drogoh <drogoh@necessary-evil.org> To: Ronald van der Pol <Ronald.vanderPol@rvdp.org> Cc: net@FreeBSD.ORG Subject: Re: ping6 ::1 -> No route to host Message-ID: <20021117102940.755ea0f2.drogoh@necessary-evil.org> In-Reply-To: <20021117134022.GC13793@rvdp.org> References: <20021116122410.17819bfc.drogoh@necessary-evil.org> <20021116203750.GA8450@rvdp.org> <20021117031702.24609282.drogoh@necessary-evil.org> <20021117134022.GC13793@rvdp.org>
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On Sun, 17 Nov 2002 14:40:22 +0100 Ronald van der Pol <Ronald.vanderPol@rvdp.org> wrote: > On Sun, Nov 17, 2002 at 03:17:02 -0600, drogoh wrote: > > > I have rules to allow protocol 41 in and out, what else should I have? > > I had a similar problem when I upgraded to -current. All IPv6 packets > were blocked bij default. Are you sure you are not blocking native > IPv6 packets to localhost. You could try if "permit any any" for > the IPv6 rules (/etc/ipf6.conf I think) and see if that solves > your problem. > > I had a disk crash and I don't have access to -current at the moment. > So I cannot check it, but I think IPv6 firewalling is on by default > when you have ipfilter configured and it is blocking all by default. > > rvdp > I did a clean install of 4.7-RELEASE this morning and IPv6 works without a hitch. Although I'm still confused about why -CURRENT didn't work. To Unsubscribe: send mail to majordomo@FreeBSD.org with "unsubscribe freebsd-net" in the body of the message
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