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  3. Do anyone know of a current cheap way to get globally unique non-ULA IPv6 addresses (/56 or /48), that I don't need routed to me?

Do anyone know of a current cheap way to get globally unique non-ULA IPv6 addresses (/56 or /48), that I don't need routed to me?

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  • samantha42@infosec.exchangeS This user is from outside of this forum
    samantha42@infosec.exchangeS This user is from outside of this forum
    samantha42@infosec.exchange
    wrote last edited by
    #1

    Do anyone know of a current cheap way to get globally unique non-ULA IPv6 addresses (/56 or /48), that I don't need routed to me?

    Doing it the "real" way, via a LIR is silly expensive for this purpose.

    I could of course just pick a random IPv6 network and hope it won't cause problems, but that seems very ugly...

    I recall some time ago seeing a hobbyist selling addresses they got out of a larger allocations for fun, but I can't find a link to that - if it still exists.

    That this is a problem feels very silly, but here we are.

    Background: My ISP only gives me a /64, which means, since I have multiple networks behind that, using other addresses and NAT is only the real way to get IPv6 behind my firewall. ULA does not work as operating systems notice these are not "real" IP addresses and behave silly including preferring IPv4.

    bsdphk@fosstodon.orgB kajer@infosec.exchangeK 2 Replies Last reply
    0
    • samantha42@infosec.exchangeS samantha42@infosec.exchange

      Do anyone know of a current cheap way to get globally unique non-ULA IPv6 addresses (/56 or /48), that I don't need routed to me?

      Doing it the "real" way, via a LIR is silly expensive for this purpose.

      I could of course just pick a random IPv6 network and hope it won't cause problems, but that seems very ugly...

      I recall some time ago seeing a hobbyist selling addresses they got out of a larger allocations for fun, but I can't find a link to that - if it still exists.

      That this is a problem feels very silly, but here we are.

      Background: My ISP only gives me a /64, which means, since I have multiple networks behind that, using other addresses and NAT is only the real way to get IPv6 behind my firewall. ULA does not work as operating systems notice these are not "real" IP addresses and behave silly including preferring IPv4.

      bsdphk@fosstodon.orgB This user is from outside of this forum
      bsdphk@fosstodon.orgB This user is from outside of this forum
      bsdphk@fosstodon.org
      wrote last edited by
      #2

      @samantha42

      Isn't that what fc00:: is for ?

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      0
      • samantha42@infosec.exchangeS samantha42@infosec.exchange

        Do anyone know of a current cheap way to get globally unique non-ULA IPv6 addresses (/56 or /48), that I don't need routed to me?

        Doing it the "real" way, via a LIR is silly expensive for this purpose.

        I could of course just pick a random IPv6 network and hope it won't cause problems, but that seems very ugly...

        I recall some time ago seeing a hobbyist selling addresses they got out of a larger allocations for fun, but I can't find a link to that - if it still exists.

        That this is a problem feels very silly, but here we are.

        Background: My ISP only gives me a /64, which means, since I have multiple networks behind that, using other addresses and NAT is only the real way to get IPv6 behind my firewall. ULA does not work as operating systems notice these are not "real" IP addresses and behave silly including preferring IPv4.

        kajer@infosec.exchangeK This user is from outside of this forum
        kajer@infosec.exchangeK This user is from outside of this forum
        kajer@infosec.exchange
        wrote last edited by
        #3

        @samantha42

        you can get a tunnelbroker account and reserve a range

        Link Preview Image
        Hurricane Electric Free IPv6 Tunnel Broker

        favicon

        (tunnelbroker.net)

        the rest of the internet would route those ranges to the tunnel broker and get null routed if there is no tunnel to forward to.

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