Thanks Landon, to be honest I do not really consider these part of the MTCNA intro videos that I have been making as MikroTik does not expect you to know things like this for the MTCNA. They have separate more advanced certs where you need to understand these topics. However, I do think IPv6 should be a fundamental and should actually be included in the MTCNA, similar to VLANs which they only discuss in MTCRE. It is waaay too an important topic to ignore or put in its own cert path, most network vendors cover IPv4 and IPv6 together in all their base certifications, this includes Cisco, Juniper and Huawei only MikroTik makes an MTCIPv6 certificate.
@@TheNetworkBerg Wait what?!? No VLANs or IPv6 in the MTCNA seems strange. I just assumed it would be considering CCNA covered that stuff nearly right out of the gate. I will say your video has given me some more confidence in fooling around with Mikrotik's implementation of IPv6.
It seems VERY strange to me as well, but this is the path MikroTik has had for many many many years. Feel free to look at their outline of what they expect you to know for the MTCNA: mikrotik.com/download/pdf/MTCNA_Outline.pdf
Now that ROS 7 is out of beta, can you re-do this topic to address ROS 7 as a whole for IPv6? I am hoping to have a WISP starting a a couple of months and I'm thinking about using IPv6 within the WISP - down to the CPEs. But I am really new to IPv6 - this is on of the first few videos I've watched on the subject. Can you also address things like - could my customers still use IPv4 within their private networks - or would they need to use IPv6 internally as well at that point? How are things like DNS servers, time servers, internet addresses effected by this? In other words, if my internal routers are handing out (DCHP) IPv6 addresses (based on range assigned to me on my DIA) - do they hand out IPv6 addresses for DNS servers? If so, and my customers are running IPv4 internally - what do they get for a DNS server address? Or, if using IPv6 addresses - how do they get to web pages and such on the internet that are not using IPv6 addresses? I really don't get the overall usage impact of how the IPv4 and 6 addressing schemes work together over the whole spectrum. Hope you can help!
Hi Andrew, yes I would love to revisit this topic on RoSv7 and have this actually scheduled :) Though I am more or less waiting for a long-term release of RoSv7 to come out because there are definitely still some teething issues with the stable version currently.
hello, just curious have you try ipv6 ospf without local-link address ? like say we deploy point to point or /126 address and then establish ospf using those address i've been stuck trying to establish it without local-link address
@@TheNetworkBerg testing several time i don't think it's gonna work without local-link and there's a bug with ros below ros 7, which is ipv6 ibgp recursive routing
Hey man. Would appreciate it if you did a video on ipv6 failover in ros7, IE with 2 dual stack ISPs. I do realise this is a pretty fringe in the context of south Africa but would be highly appreciated.
Not a noob question at all, I am happy if people ask questions! To answer you, no. You do not need 2 MTs to setup IPv6, it can run natively on a single MT. The biggest issue for people getting into IPv6 is understanding that it is a different stack. Meaning you cannot connect your IPv4 LAN network to route out with an IPv6 connection unless you use some mechanisms like NAT64 which does not exist in MikroTik.
Good evening, I am very sorry for bothering you but I am practicing the topic of ipv6 after the last training and if you allow me I have a question: due to the fact that my internet provider, which is Inea, does not provide access to ipv6 addresses, I came up with a different solution; in Horyzont I have my own servers and a server on mikrotik l2tp binding, the client is on my 3011 router and after ipv4 everything works fine; on the edge router in Horizon I already have access to ipv6 addressing because Horizon has a pool; in the company, the router responds to ping 2001:4860:4860::8888, additionally, on the Proxmox server, I entered the /64 addressing and the machines respond - so in the company in my network I have both types question: how can i "pull" ipv6 address through l2tp tunnel to my house from Horizon? I'm practicing it the second evening and while the two ends ping me, the router itself at home has no way out to the world through ipv6 addressing; Is it possible to use two addresses in one tunnel at all? what would i like to achieve? one /64 via l2tp bindnig tunnel to have at home and address the laptop; leave the house to the world through the tunnel via Horizon with ipv6 addressing I hope I was able to make my problem clear enough Horizon is the company he works for, it is an ISP thank you very much for every answer Regards Daniel Świtalski
learing IPv6 and this is one of the best video that allow me to understand better. not just theory but also practice and explanation.
Hi. Great content. Can you do a video explaining IPv6 6RD Rapid Deployment configuration on Mikrotik router please?
Nice presentation 👍👍thanks
Incredible work! You have been pumping these out! Do you consider these videos like a MTCNA intro?
Thanks Landon, to be honest I do not really consider these part of the MTCNA intro videos that I have been making as MikroTik does not expect you to know things like this for the MTCNA. They have separate more advanced certs where you need to understand these topics. However, I do think IPv6 should be a fundamental and should actually be included in the MTCNA, similar to VLANs which they only discuss in MTCRE. It is waaay too an important topic to ignore or put in its own cert path, most network vendors cover IPv4 and IPv6 together in all their base certifications, this includes Cisco, Juniper and Huawei only MikroTik makes an MTCIPv6 certificate.
@@TheNetworkBerg Wait what?!? No VLANs or IPv6 in the MTCNA seems strange. I just assumed it would be considering CCNA covered that stuff nearly right out of the gate. I will say your video has given me some more confidence in fooling around with Mikrotik's implementation of IPv6.
It seems VERY strange to me as well, but this is the path MikroTik has had for many many many years. Feel free to look at their outline of what they expect you to know for the MTCNA:
mikrotik.com/download/pdf/MTCNA_Outline.pdf
@@blindside995 it is in second course about routing. Do not remember proper name.
Now that ROS 7 is out of beta, can you re-do this topic to address ROS 7 as a whole for IPv6? I am hoping to have a WISP starting a a couple of months and I'm thinking about using IPv6 within the WISP - down to the CPEs. But I am really new to IPv6 - this is on of the first few videos I've watched on the subject. Can you also address things like - could my customers still use IPv4 within their private networks - or would they need to use IPv6 internally as well at that point? How are things like DNS servers, time servers, internet addresses effected by this? In other words, if my internal routers are handing out (DCHP) IPv6 addresses (based on range assigned to me on my DIA) - do they hand out IPv6 addresses for DNS servers? If so, and my customers are running IPv4 internally - what do they get for a DNS server address? Or, if using IPv6 addresses - how do they get to web pages and such on the internet that are not using IPv6 addresses? I really don't get the overall usage impact of how the IPv4 and 6 addressing schemes work together over the whole spectrum. Hope you can help!
Hi Andrew, yes I would love to revisit this topic on RoSv7 and have this actually scheduled :) Though I am more or less waiting for a long-term release of RoSv7 to come out because there are definitely still some teething issues with the stable version currently.
Hi, can you please make a video on IPV6 Server configuration and client configuration within a LAN? Thank you.
hello, just curious have you try ipv6 ospf without local-link address ? like say we deploy point to point or /126 address and then establish ospf using those address
i've been stuck trying to establish it without local-link address
Hi, I can't say that I have. I will potentially Lab this and see if I run into similar issues and if they can be fixed.
@@TheNetworkBerg testing several time i don't think it's gonna work without local-link and there's a bug with ros below ros 7, which is ipv6 ibgp recursive routing
Nice video, learned a lot from it
Glad it was helpful!
Bro, thank you so much!!!
No problem!! :D
Hey man. Would appreciate it if you did a video on ipv6 failover in ros7, IE with 2 dual stack ISPs. I do realise this is a pretty fringe in the context of south Africa but would be highly appreciated.
Any chance you can redo this one on ROS7 and or a combination of ROS7 and 6?
Sir can you explain mangel please
Thanks sir
Well-Done
how can we do ibgp in ipv6 please explain
thank you man!!! like from me!
Thank you very much Roman, appreciate it a lot!
Nice
pls do ipv4 ospf -nssa area witg e.g.
Sorry sir. Noob question. Do we need 2 MTs to set up IPV6?
Not a noob question at all, I am happy if people ask questions! To answer you, no. You do not need 2 MTs to setup IPv6, it can run natively on a single MT. The biggest issue for people getting into IPv6 is understanding that it is a different stack. Meaning you cannot connect your IPv4 LAN network to route out with an IPv6 connection unless you use some mechanisms like NAT64 which does not exist in MikroTik.
From where ppl learn APPLY + OK ? You are IT and you should know that OK = Apply + Close window, ok?
Seems like a minor thing to get upset about :P.
Good evening,
I am very sorry for bothering you but I am practicing the topic of ipv6 after the last training and if you allow me I have a question:
due to the fact that my internet provider, which is Inea, does not provide access to ipv6 addresses, I came up with a different solution;
in Horyzont I have my own servers and a server on mikrotik l2tp binding, the client is on my 3011 router and after ipv4 everything works fine;
on the edge router in Horizon I already have access to ipv6 addressing because Horizon has a pool;
in the company, the router responds to ping 2001:4860:4860::8888, additionally, on the Proxmox server, I entered the /64 addressing and the machines respond - so in the company in my network I have both types
question:
how can i "pull" ipv6 address through l2tp tunnel to my house from Horizon?
I'm practicing it the second evening and while the two ends ping me, the router itself at home has no way out to the world through ipv6 addressing;
Is it possible to use two addresses in one tunnel at all?
what would i like to achieve?
one /64 via l2tp bindnig tunnel to have at home and address the laptop;
leave the house to the world through the tunnel via Horizon with ipv6 addressing
I hope I was able to make my problem clear enough
Horizon is the company he works for, it is an ISP
thank you very much for every answer
Regards
Daniel Świtalski