Quantcast
Channel: how to configure native ipv6 on tomato - with dnsmasq
Browsing all 16 articles
Browse latest View live

how to configure native ipv6 on tomato - with dnsmasq

Hi guys, I need a help. I have latest shibby tomato firmware without radvd. From my ISP I've got a IPes for native IPv6 setting. settings are: connecting segment: aaaa:bbb:xxxx::c/126 isp router:...

View Article



(no title)

There's no proper ipv6 support on tomato. works a bit here and there, broken in others, including dhcpv6. You're better off with openwrt if you need compliant ipv6 router.

View Article

Re: how to configure native ipv6 on tomato - with dnsmasq

I have to agree. I've only managed to get TomatoUSB to work with radvd. Getting it to work without radvd would be a trick and a half. If someone gets it working please post your configuration. Really...

View Article

(no title)

the main and only selling point of tomato is qos. when you have more than 100Mbps, qos isn't really needed and you'll hit routing performance issue with the aging firmware kernel. so if you have the...

View Article

Re: how to configure native ipv6 on tomato - with dnsmasq

To me the power of tomato USB is it presents everything I need to configure in the UI in a user friendly manner, but does not prevent me from configuring things with a command line. For me, QOS is...

View Article


(no title)

What's the criteria for having "IPv6 working"? I just spent the whole day figuring it out by way of tunnelbroker (6in4static) and the HE.net certification course, such that on my RT-N66U w/ Shibby...

View Article

(no title)

Ipv6 support in tomato was written by someone who only had access to hurricane electric tunnel. So that's the only working ipv6 support that it'll be good at. Plug the tomato into other transition...

View Article

Re: how to configure native ipv6 on tomato - with dnsmasq

So long as you are using a single routing, and an HE tunnel, it should work fine. With that configuration, using radvd for address allocation and routing works fine. It is if you try to do something...

View Article


Re: how to configure native ipv6 on tomato - with dnsmasq

I just installed openwrt on one of my nslu2's that have been collecting dust. As far as ipv6 support, I'm not impressed. The web interface doesn't support ipv6 at all. The command line stuff is pretty...

View Article


(no title)

Openwrt is embedded Linux, and Linux ain't user friendly lala land. Working right and correctly is more important than pretty gui because proper users build their own firmware without gui. There's...

View Article

Re: how to configure native ipv6 on tomato - with dnsmasq

I found just as one can mix optware packages with entware, one can mix optware with openwrt. None of the wiki pages describe methods that currently work, but just doing something like: opkg -d opt -f...

View Article

(no title)

The notion of pulling from an alternate repo feed makes me wonder — is Entware's metadata handling for target platform/architecture good enough to handle alternate feeds? In other words, is it then...

View Article

(no title)

Comcast offers native ipv6. Google for Comcast+tomato and you'll find lot's of post about all the hacks that you need to get it working. And that's with Comcast alone. Tomato is simply not IPv6...

View Article


(no title)

Tomato firmware doesn't even meet 10% of the requirements in RFC 6204. It is one of the most non-compliant IPv6 firmware after dd-wrt, despite having an "IPv6" label and function in some builds.

View Article

(no title)

so stop whining about it and contribute…

View Article


(no title)

Fuck you. I'm using openwrt and stock firmware that are compliant.

View Article
Browsing all 16 articles
Browse latest View live




Latest Images