I should call my ISP Giganet, but thought I would ask around on here first.
I've just moved over to Giganet via CityFibre and ended up with CGNAT.
I could pay £3/month for a static IP with port forwarding etc, however, I chose to use Cloudflare tunnels to access my home network instead.
I was also wondering if I could access my home network using the ISP supplied IPv6.
Now to the point.
When I enabled IPv6 on my TP-Link Archer AX6000 router, I noticed the pings that I was running to 1.1.1.1 & 8.8.8.8 started to intermittently fail, and my streaming radio was dropping.
The pings i was also running to my router 192.168.1.1 and the pings to the new ipv6 address 2a05:87c3:x1x1:cc33:gf12:y7ll:dc65:g1187 (generic address) continued responding as expected.
When i disabled the IPv6, the connection remained up and no packets were dropped for over 30 minutes.
The router is configured as below
Case 2: IPv4 Connection Type is “PPPoE”
1. Select PPPoE. Enable Share the same PPPoE session with IPV4.
If Your ISP Provided 2 Separate Accounts for the IPv4 and IPv6 Connections:
Uncheck the Box for “Share the Same PPPoE Session with IPv4
Manually Enter the Username and Password You Were Given By Your ISP for the IPv6 Connection
2. Go to the Advanced Settings Tab, Select Auto under the option for “Get IPv6 Address”.
3. Select Enable in “Prefix Delegation”.
4. Click Save.
And just a jpeg showing the pings drop.
https://www.dropbox.com/scl/fi/69c65mh19soo0voxim2o6...
oh, and the last thing. Different ipv6 test sites give different results advising if my setup will work with ipv6.
____________________________________________
Huawei B2268H/B222s-42 connected to ASUS RT-AC68U
http://www.thinkbroadband.com/speedtest/results.html...
http://www.speedtest.net/my-result/3141683986
Huawei B2268H/B222s-42 connected to ASUS RT-AC68U
http://www.thinkbroadband.com/speedtest/results.html...
http://www.speedtest.net/my-result/3141683986



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Mitchy_mitch