matthew_eli
Senior Member
Huh, 64 is bigger than 48... isn't it???
From what I know, an IPv6 /48 prefix is bigger than /64
Huh, 64 is bigger than 48... isn't it???
Really, well I guess I better start playing with this IPv6 Cr@p soon... as it seems it's not going away, thx (I think)From what I know, an IPv6 /48 prefix is bigger than /64
386.5_2 reflash gets me WAN Aggregation and 160Mhz back, plus much faster and reliable connection to cable modem which is a Netgear CM1150V, seconds instead of minutes. WIFI drops stopped, authentication errors stopped, network cable and ethernet cable disconnects stopped, other weird errors are gone, everything seems fine and no more reboots.Yep, plus it’s AT season in my area and quite a bit of aircraft this year. 80 seems fine, don’t really notice a performance difference but I do like it when certain devices connect and it jumps 160. Helps when moving large files and downloading stuff from work and games. Which it does on the previous firmware.
Something got corrupted somehow. Still getting reboots, now getting TrendMicro errors, and scripts aren’t sticking. It also takes forever to get synced with my cable modem. Network cable disconnected messages etc. USB drive is my first guess since I kept it on 80 overnight. I’m going to try previous firmware one more time since that gets aggregation and previous settings stable.
But why before, with 386.5, I had a /48 prefix for Lan too?@matthew_eli and @capncybo the answers you seek can be found at https://ipv6.he.net/certification/
a /48 prefix is indeed larger than a /64 (my ISP's native IPv6 gives me a /56...but having registered at HE, I can claim a /48 if I choose to use their DDNS...and that's the case for anyone)
your WAN Prefix is delegated as a /48 and the LAN's is a /64 subnet which allows all sorts of addresses...2^(64-48) addresses...2^16 of them, 65,536 addresses in that /64 subnet
quite a bit larger than the 255 or so in IPv4, so you still have plenty of room to spread out.
I'd look to Asus on that...they have made some fixes to the code underlying IPv6 functionality. this might be their way of keeping everything "happy" See my addendum to my original reply for some further perspective on this. Our routers are increasingly capable, but they're not Datacenter/Internet Backbone capable, right?But why before, with 386.5, I had a /48 prefix for Lan too?
One very minor thing that I just saw was the LAN indicator lights were not on.
I’m showing 64 on the IPv6 page, but I know my ISP provides 56.But why before, with 386.5, I had a /48 prefix for Lan too?
Updated both units to this latest version. So far no issues.
A /48 bit prefix, means 2^(64-48) address, rather 65536. It's huge, but it can be handled by a router I guess@matthew_eli and @capncybo the answers you seek can be found at https://ipv6.he.net/certification/
a /48 prefix is indeed larger than a /64 (my ISP's native IPv6 gives me a /56...but having registered at HE, I can claim a /48 if I choose to use their DDNS...and that's the case for anyone)
your WAN Prefix is delegated as a /48 and the LAN's is a /64 subnet which allows all sorts of addresses...2^(64-48) addresses...2^16 of them, 65,536 addresses in that /64 subnet
quite a bit larger than the 255 or so in IPv4, so you still have plenty of room to spread out.
If you really want your mind shaken loose, consider that an IPv6 address is 128bits long, and a /48 only uses 48 of them, leaving another 80 bits (2^80) for other addresses below it for you to use...trillions, I think. We're talking something like the difference between an 8088 and i9 processor as far as transistor-gates in comparison.
I’m having the same issue on my AX56U where the previous selected “Australia” option turned blank after the upgrade, and after I selected it back there’s no DFS channel options.I just completed a dirty upgrade on my RT-AC88U from 386.5_2 to 386.7_0. All went smoothly (thankyou!) but when I checked the WiFi channels after the upgrade, the professional 'Region' setting had changed from 'Australia' to blank. I changed the Region to Australia, saved the settings and the router rebooted as normal. However, after reboot with the Region now showing as Australia I now have only 5GHz channels 36-48 and 149-165 available for selection, whereas previously I had all of the Australian regulatory approved channels available, ie. 32-48, 50-68 (DFS), 96-116 (DFS), 132-144 (DFS) and 149-165.
I'm seeing the correct list of 2.4GHz channels being available for selection, ie. 1-13, so the problem appears to be confined to the 5GHz channel selection.
Is doing a full reset likely to fix the issue? Or is this a bug in 386.7_0?
Thanks for all your excellent work on the Merlin project - very much appreciated!
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