# IPv6 Support This is a work in progress, more polish to follow. ## Tunnel IPv6 Address To OpenVPN Clients This feature is advanced and recommended only for those who already have a functioning IPv4 tunnel and know how IPv6 works. Systemd is used to setup a static route and Debian 8.1 or later is recommended as the host distribution. Others probably work, but haven't been tested. ### Step 1 — Setup IPv6 on the Host Machine The tutorial uses a free tunnel from [tunnelbroker.net](https://tunnelbroker.net/) to get a /64 and /48 prefix allocated to me. The tunnel endpoint is less then 3 ms away from Digital Ocean's San Francisco datacenter. Place the following in `/etc/network/interfaces`. Replace `PUBLIC_IP` with your host's public IPv4 address and replace 2001:db8::2 and 2001:db8::1 with the corresponding tunnel endpoints: auto he-ipv6 iface he-ipv6 inet6 v4tunnel address 2001:db8::2 netmask 64 endpoint 72.52.104.74 local PUBLIC_IP ttl 255 gateway 2001:db8::1 Bring the interface up: ifup he-ipv6 Test that IPv6 works on the host: ping6 google.com If this doesn't work, figure it out. It may be necessary to add an firewall rule to allow IP protocol 41 through the firewall. ### Step 2 — Update Docker's Init To Enable IPv6 Support Add the `--ipv6` to the Docker daemon invocation. On **Ubuntu** and old versions of Debian Append the `--ipv6` argument to the `DOCKER_OPTS` variable in: /etc/default/docker On modern **systemd** distributions copy the service file and modify it and reload the service: sed -e 's:^\(ExecStart.*\):\1 --ipv6:' /lib/systemd/system/docker.service | tee /etc/systemd/system/docker.service systemctl restart docker.service ### Step 3 — Setup the systemd Unit File Copy the systemd init file from the docker-openvpn /init directory of the repository and install into `/etc/systemd/system/docker-openvpn.service` curl -o /etc/systemd/system/docker-openvpn@.service 'https://raw.githubusercontent.com/kylemanna/docker-openvpn/dev/init/docker-openvpn%40.service' Edit the file, replace `IP6_PREFIX` value with the value of your /64 prefix. vi /etc/systemd/system/docker-openvpn@.service Finally, reload systemd so the changes take affect: systemctl daemon-reload ### Step 4 — Start OpenVPN Ensure that OpenVPN has been initialized and configured as described in the top level `README.md`. Start the systemd service file specifying the volume container suffix as the instance. For example, `INSTANCE=test0` has a docker volume container named `ovpn-data-test0` and service will create `ovpn-test0` container: systemctl start docker-openvpn@test0 Verify logs if needed: systemctl status docker-openvpn@test0 docker logs ovpn-test0 ### Step 4 — Modify Client Config for IPv6 Default Route Append the default route for the public Internet: echo "route-ipv6 2000::/3" >> clientname.ovpn ### Step 5 — Start up Client If all went according to plan, then `ping6 2600::` and `ping6 google.com` should work. Fire up a web browser and attempt to navigate to [https://ipv6.google.com](https://ipv6.google.com). ## Connect to the OpenVPN Server Over IPv6 This feature requires a docker daemon with working IPv6 support. This will allow connections over IPv4 and IPv6. Generate server configuration with the udp6 or tcp6 protocol: docker run -v $OVPN_DATA:/etc/openvpn --rm kylemanna/openvpn ovpn_genconfig -u udp6://VPN.SERVERNAME.COM docker run -v $OVPN_DATA:/etc/openvpn --rm kylemanna/openvpn ovpn_genconfig -u tcp6://VPN.SERVERNAME.COM