Asus support has a general support document (from 2023) on how to setup IPV6 that may or may not be relevant to your question.
You may want to see, if you haven't already, if there is specific support forum for your broadband provider to see if anyone in those forums can answer if any specific settings that may be needed for IPv6 on your broadband provider's service. Like what the IPv6 Connection Type setting should be.
Who is the ISP?Unfortuantely there are no other forum posts related to my ISP.
Who is the ISP?
This ONT is a router as well, Asus IPv6 configuration must be Passthrough. This Asus router is in double NAT with private WAN IP address.
Will your ISP allow you to bridge their gateway equipment? (this means turning the routing capabilities of the ISP equipment off)
doing so will put all security and privacy under your control/responsibility.
Double NAT is one way to stay more private
In the Reddit link I posted above one person describes doing exactly that. They contacted the broadband provider (SLT) and asked them to put the fiber ONT/router into bridge mode. The person in that reddit post gives a lengthy reply on a couple of approaches.Will your ISP allow you to bridge their gateway equipment?
Double NAT is one way to stay more private
Will ASUS IPv6 DNS servers work properly in this Double NAT mode?
With IPv6 enabled in Passthrough there is no double NAT for IPv6. There is no NAT.
I know nothing about your ISP, I don't know why this ISP device is in router mode and can it be used bridge mode, I don't know why you enabled IPv6 on your Asus router. Currently your IPv4 network is in double NAT, perhaps even tipple NAT if your ISP uses CGNAT, your IPv6 network is managed by the ISP device in Passthrough configuration, etc. When you enable/disable options on your router(s) there is a reason behind it. What is the reason behind this setup? What do you want to achieve, what wasn't working before? "Not very knowledgeable" and playing with settings can be risky.
@Tech9 and I have differing opinions on this, but my outlook&attitude is more in line with yours, so here is my support:I just like to try out new technologies/standards. No special reason for enabling IPv6.
To enable IPv6 on ISP router I had to use a different broadband username, with "v6" added as a suffix. And on the ASUS router I tried different methods and IPv6 didn't work for some reason. Then finally updated ASUS router to Passthrough mode and now it seems to be working.
Is this risky??? If you are using IPv6 there is still a router firewall there. So unless you turn the firewall off, or poke holes in it, then you'll be covered against "unsolicited access".
*It can get complex if you are running a server using the IPv6 address and your ISP treats the IPv6 addresses as dynamic!
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