v6 over PPPoA/PPPoE/L2TP for customer DSL

Jeroen Massar jeroen at unfix.org
Tue Dec 27 13:45:42 CET 2005


Sebastian Abt wrote:
> Hi,
> 
> * Mohacsi Janos wrote:
>> What kind of of openwrt image/configuration is used by your users? Can
>> you tell me?
> 
> I tried to contact one user I know to be using Linksys, but didn't get a
> response yet.  I guess he's on vacation, so I'll drop you a mail as soon
> as I get a response.

I can give a partial response, as it is not from that situation, but it
might help Janos through his vacation ;) I have two wrt's in my home
network here, both do IPv6 fine. (insmod ipv6), like everything else.

The way you configure them is simply the same as every other linux box,
install required & tools done. The CPU is a bit different than i386 but
that is not an issue for most programs especially as there are
precompiled packages available for nearly everything.

For rolling your own custom OpenWRT image, check:
http://fahrplan.congress.ccc.de/congress/2005/fahrplan/events/1099.en.html
(Don't forget to check out the rest of the CCC, looks very interesting)

IMHO WRT's and NLSU's are currently the neatest toys to have around,
them being extremely versatile. Big yeah for Vendor C this time <grin>

Greets,
 Jeroen

--
Hacking OpenWRT - Felix Fietkau

OpenWrt is a Linux distribution for embedded Wireless LAN routers. In
this lecture I'm going to introduce OpenWrt and show you how you can use
and customize it for your own projects.

OpenWrt is basically a complete Linux distribution designed to work
within the space constraints of average wireless routers like the
Linksys WRT54G or the ASUS WL-500g. Since April 2005 the build system
has been completely rewritten to support a large repository of packages
that are built automatically and to make it easy to port it to other
router platforms in the future. That makes it useful for creating custom
solutions involving wireless networking, like a Hotspot service complete
with authentication and billing or a small Voice over IP server (with
Asterisk). I'd like to present the structure of the OpenWrt base system
and show you how you can create your own packages and firmware images
with the tools that we provide (Image Builder, SDK and the build system
itself).

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