Post AND3RVRTBpzu1glWKW by jauntywunderkind420@cybre.space
(DIR) More posts by jauntywunderkind420@cybre.space
(DIR) Post #ANCwFUH30XjRFWDEO0 by djsumdog@djsumdog.com
2022-09-04T03:10:18.134548Z
2 likes, 0 repeats
Holy shit! I now have IPv6! I'm glad I still have dnsmasq configured for router advertisements. Chattanooga's EPB must have just launched it for residential customers.
(DIR) Post #AND3RVRTBpzu1glWKW by jauntywunderkind420@cybre.space
2022-09-04T04:10:06Z
0 likes, 0 repeats
@djsumdog verizon fiber finally got it in dc like a year ago or so
(DIR) Post #AND3RVvbNo6HX8raIS by djsumdog@djsumdog.com
2022-09-04T04:30:53.617153Z
1 likes, 0 repeats
@jauntywunderkind420 I wrote a tutorial for running IPv6 with custom Linux routers when I was on Cumcast last year:https://battlepenguin.com/tech/setting-up-ipv6-on-a-linux-router/Good they had IPv6, but terrible quality of service. My current fiber provider is pretty amazing, and this just makes some of the projects I'm working on a lot easier.
(DIR) Post #AND3uMtK3oGlu8YWcS by astatine@bae.st
2022-09-04T04:36:08.867628Z
0 likes, 0 repeats
@djsumdog @jauntywunderkind420 your unbound config is that simple? I was just trying to set up unbound on a home server and I think it was choking on IPv6. Bind worked with minimal configuration though.
(DIR) Post #AND4LQfs6SY3SLATcO by djsumdog@djsumdog.com
2022-09-04T04:41:00.722873Z
1 likes, 0 repeats
@astatine @jauntywunderkind420 I double checked. Yea, that's all I got currently. Dnsmasq handles all the local DNS and just forwards non-local queries to it. I'm sure if I start doing anymore more complex, there will be more to it. Dnsmasq also takes care of local DNS/IPv6 queries .. if I ssh to another local box, it resolves to the dynamic IPv6 address.
(DIR) Post #AND4iFtcLJJOgjTvzk by astatine@bae.st
2022-09-04T04:45:09.664830Z
1 likes, 0 repeats
@djsumdog @jauntywunderkind420 oh ok. I was just trying to get it set up as a resolver and it wasn't responding to queries at all from the network. I think I'll stick with bind for now. It was super easy to set up and seems pretty fast.
(DIR) Post #AND51VZ0JcHEmZ1KdM by djsumdog@djsumdog.com
2022-09-04T04:48:38.056488Z
1 likes, 0 repeats
@astatine @jauntywunderkind420 Sounds good. I used bind for years too; had a couple scripts somewhere that generated my zone files too. I never did get up a post on that back in the day. I'll hopefully be doing a lot more cooler tech stuff once my homelab project is finished.
(DIR) Post #AND5i6gQhAS84No3N2 by astatine@bae.st
2022-09-04T04:56:20.520048Z
0 likes, 0 repeats
@djsumdog @jauntywunderkind420 Great informative article by the way. One of these days I'll wipe out OpenWRT for Linux distro install.
(DIR) Post #AND77dnUobjXxrqpLE by djsumdog@djsumdog.com
2022-09-04T05:12:08.291990Z
2 likes, 0 repeats
@astatine @jauntywunderkind420 Nothing wrong with openwrt. It has a ton-o-packages. I used it for embedded development way back when we had to used Linksys WRT54G and E2000L routers for cheap boards because Raspberry Pis weren't a thing yet and Beagle Bones cost like $200! Those routers only had 4MB ~ 8MB of space too, but OpenWRT had a python-mini package that would fit on the 8MB versions, so I could write all our embedded stuff in Python instead of C.
(DIR) Post #AND7KF9Tl2NHID8uXI by astatine@bae.st
2022-09-04T05:14:26.358583Z
1 likes, 0 repeats
@djsumdog I've got it running on a Jetway miniPC and it has been pretty good. I also have an ARM system that I can run it on but X86-64 seems to be a bit faster and more responsive.Certainly is easy to set up and configure.
(DIR) Post #AND7trlQBugDBHsODw by djsumdog@djsumdog.com
2022-09-04T05:20:51.148619Z
1 likes, 0 repeats
@astatine oh cool. I've thought about using Jetway thin-ITX boards for routers in the past, but they've always seemed kinda expensive. A few years back I built a custom thin-ITX router: https://battlepenguin.com/tech/building-a-thin-itx-router/..but the motherboard kinda sucked and a common issue with it was the 2nd Ethernet adapter going out. I lucked out a year ago, finding this old industrial Intel Atom system on eBay for $70:https://battlepenguin.com/tech/installing-void-linux-with-a-serial-terminal/..and have been using it since.
(DIR) Post #AND8GMOyxacCZf6fQG by astatine@bae.st
2022-09-04T05:24:56.545524Z
2 likes, 0 repeats
@djsumdog Yeah it was expensive when I got it a few years ago. More than what you can find on Ali Express these days. It works great though except its EFI implementation is awful and has issues with PFSense or opnsense. I ran IPFire on it for the longest time and finally flashed OpenWRT because it has more features like IPv6 support.
(DIR) Post #AND8rWHXBpebvlLFgm by m0n5t3r@ps.m0n5t3r.info
2022-09-04T05:31:37.472096Z
0 likes, 0 repeats
@djsumdog I tend to disable v6 because it _really_ wants to circumvent VPNs and I'm not smart enough to convince it otherwise; default route? 2000::/3? those are merely hints, it will go where it wants to go...
(DIR) Post #ANGkQbr9LFuMMoNCJE by astatine@bae.st
2022-09-05T23:16:43.182814Z
1 likes, 0 repeats
@djsumdog I figured out why unbound wasn't working. A config file in /etc/unbound/unbound.conf.d pointed to a root.key file that didn't exist. hours of troubleshooting and rewriting the .conf file just to find I needed to comment a line out.