except for nor using it at all, of course.
So I want to make my homelab IPv6 ready, because I have too much free time, i guess. There are two decisions that I’m currently unsure about:
- ULA or not. Do you have local only addresses or do your clients communicate using the global IPv6 address? Does not using ULAs work without a static IP from the ISP?
- DHCPv6 or is SLAAC enough?
For each question both options seem to be possible and I’m interested in your experience
Cheers


Like I said: unless your ISP sucks. I don’t see the issue with dual stack and I don’t know why you’re bringing other transition mechanisms into this. Obviously they kinda suck. Dual stack really doesn’t have much of a downside or a performance hit unless your clients or DNS are doing something stupid. In which case you can still choose to configure a client to use one over the other. Many ISPs, especially outside the US, don’t have enough IPv4 address space and have to use CGNAT, in which case you’re much better off with a dual stack setup and a DNS config that prefers AAAA records, imho. IPv4 only leaves you with NAT, which sucks and IPv6 only isn’t feasible currently.