Hello,
we write the year 2021 and ipv6 has grown to an over 30 years old protocol. But it still seems to lack basic support.
We switched from OPNsense to FortiGate and our network is dual-stacked. With OPNsense it was no problem to declare FQDN address objects that resolved to all A and AAAA records. And really nobody wants to create ipv6 objects manually. So we use mainly FQDN to access ipv6 resources.
In FortiGate FQDN objects just resolve to A records and no chance to get my ipv6 addresses added. Any hints, tricks how to keep our system dual-stacked without abandoning our ipv6 design or manually add each ip resource twice? The lack of ipv6 support makes many cool features useless e.g. FSSO agent. I bet users in ipv6 networks won't be resolved dynamically to address objects and get no access - except they disable ipv6 on their pcs.
How do you work with dual-stacked servers without adding everything twice and manually adding 128-bit long addresses which are more likely to have typos than legacy ips?
Kind regards,
Florian
Nominating a forum post submits a request to create a new Knowledge Article based on the forum post topic. Please ensure your nomination includes a solution within the reply.
Hmmm, seems nobody uses ipv6 with a fortigate. That explains the lack in ipv6 support when nobody asks for these features.
Well, I found the solution myself. Since fortigate cannot work dual-stacked objects, you have to create a separate address6 FQDN object, which means that you have twice the work and thus we will skip ipv6 since the ipv6 support is simply too bad. No wonder that ipv6 does not advance due to this chicken-egg problem.
I think you've summed up the last 20-30 years perfectly. I AM doing some IPv6 things and try to design all new networks to run dual-stacked but ultimately it is twice the work, yes. Just doesn't seem to be worth it.
I tried one time a couple years ago configuring myself as an IPv6 only host and found there were tons of mainstream websites I couldn't get to (Amazon.com, some Google pages, Microsoft.com, and the list goes on) so I decided I would stop spending too much time on IPv6. It's kind of sad, but also NAT works fine for most people, so I get it. :\
ipv6 suport in fortios is very strong if not the strongest in the industry, you just need to know what you are doing ;
SOCPUPFGT02 # diag firewall fqdn6 listList all FQDN:youtube.com: ID(95) REF(1) ADDR(2607:f8b0:4000:80b::200e) config firewall address6 edit "yt" set uuid fb899cca-40fd-51ec-cee5-541d21202217 set type fqdn set fqdn "youtube.com"end Ken Felix
PCNSE
NSE
StrongSwan
Select Forum Responses to become Knowledge Articles!
Select the “Nominate to Knowledge Base” button to recommend a forum post to become a knowledge article.
User | Count |
---|---|
1640 | |
1066 | |
751 | |
443 | |
210 |
The Fortinet Security Fabric brings together the concepts of convergence and consolidation to provide comprehensive cybersecurity protection for all users, devices, and applications and across all network edges.
Copyright 2024 Fortinet, Inc. All Rights Reserved.