-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- Hash: SHA1 On 4/26/2010 03:36, Mikael Abrahamsson wrote:
On Sun, 25 Apr 2010, Owen DeLong wrote:
I fail to see how link local is any more difficult than any other IPv6 address.
They're different because you have to know your local network interface name as well.
Windows might get interesting as windows interface naming is, uh, creative at best.
Exactly.
Installation software could make this easy. It could either prompt the user to type in the address on a sticker then enumerate all interfaces on the system and attempt to contact the router on each NIC. Another possibility is that it could enumerate all the interfaces, then use the IPv6 link-local scope all routers multicast (ff02::2) to enumerate a list of routers found on each link, sort them and/or filter them by ethernet OUI, and present a list of choices for the user to click on to configure the router. The user could also easily match the enet address on a little slip of paper or sticker on the router to this list, or through some initial settings on the router which allow info to be pulled from it somehow, present a list of unconfigured routers, etc, etc. Point is, I can imagine a lot of ways this could be made user-proof via software/firmware combination that requires no advanced networking knowledge. -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- Version: GnuPG v1.4.10 (MingW32) Comment: Using GnuPG with Mozilla - http://enigmail.mozdev.org/ iEYEARECAAYFAkvVpywACgkQ2fXFxl4S7sSCuwCg07Gwxz6NDYuTkVYr5gP5LUMC n4EAoIdqZQ7C/01X0EcV3vnZiTD4b7Vc =hDQN -----END PGP SIGNATURE-----