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On Wednesday, 09 March, 2011 03:14 PM, Tim Chown wrote:
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cite="mid:EMEW3|8e5ee704bdffd28c9636a75eb94ca2e5n287EC03tjc|ecs.soton.ac.uk|473AAE89-D0F8-42D2-8CA4-5231E8401A86@ecs.soton.ac.uk"
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<div>On 9 Mar 2011, at 07:05, Rod James Bio wrote:</div>
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<div text="#000000" bgcolor="#ffffff"> Hello,<br>
<br>
I've been seeing 2002:ca5a::/32 advertise on our LAN
recently, actually it's two /64 advertised by two machine. I
was wondering if anybody had any past experience on this? I
would like to know what application or operating system
feature is causing this so I could disable it and remove
this RA's on our LAN. Already search Google about this but
no luck in finding anything. Below is the output of <i>ifconfig
</i>on my workstation. Thank you.<br>
<pre> inet6 addr: 2002:ca5a:9f36:4:216:eaff:fec5:ebc/64 Scope:Global</pre>
<pre> inet6 addr: 2002:ca5a:9f5a:9:216:eaff:fec5:ebc/64 Scope:Global
Rod
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Almost certainly a Windows box with ICS turned on. See RFC6104
on rogue RAs.
<div><br>
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<div>Try <a moz-do-not-send="true"
href="http://ramond.sourceforge.net">http://ramond.sourceforge.net</a>
as one way to deprecate them (albeit a hack), otherwise wait for
implementations of RA Guard (RFC6105), or add ACLs to filter the
RAs on switch ports that don't have router interfaces upstream.
<br>
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<div>Tim</div>
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Got it. Thanks for the quick reply Tim.<br>
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