MLD Snooping and IPv6 ACLs are a must. Check to make sure that the solution allows for many (for your network's definition of many) IPv6 addresses per host. You'll have at least three per host between link local, global, and one or more privacy addresses. I've been providing native dual stack on my Cisco controller based wireless network for a few years now. IPv6 support was brought up a notch with the 7.2 code release. RA Guard was the obvious big features that was added, but I also appreciated the addition of ND caching to keep that chatter down. http://www.cisco.com/en/US/products/ps10315/products_tech_note09186a0080bae5... I've also used some Ruckus gear on an IPv6 network and it seemed to have all the right knobs and pass all the right IPv6 packets. Though this was on my home network so I can't speek to their IPv6 scalability (no reason to doubt it, just wanted to be clear). Feel free to ping me on or off list about either if you have more specific questions. -Luke On Mon, Feb 11, 2013 at 9:23 PM, Brandon Ross <bross@pobox.com> wrote:
Like so many things IPv6, many of the wifi vendors seem to lack decent support for IPv6 clients. I'm not sure why I thought the situation was better than it seems to be, I guess I'm just an optimist.
Anyway, what wifi vendors provide the best support for IPv6? I don't really care too much about management, but to deploy wifi in a service provider environment with IPv6, it would seem that you'd want at least:
RA Guard DHCPv6 Shield (unless you just do SLAAC, I guess) IPv6 Source Address Guard
Am I missing anything critical?
-- Brandon Ross Yahoo & AIM: BrandonNRoss +1-404-635-6667 ICQ: 2269442 Schedule a meeting: https://doodle.com/bross Skype: brandonross
-- =-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-= Luke Jenkins Network Engineer Weber State University