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# Setting up IPv6
IPv6 may work out of the box in many cases. But in some cases or some specific provider, you may need to tweak things manually to enable IPv6.
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## With a VPS from OVH
OVH give one IPv4 address and one IPv6 address for VPS but by default, only IPv4 is OK.
The OVH's documentation is here : https://docs.ovh.com/gb/en/vps/configuring-ipv6/
### Configure the DNS server
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Here : https://yunohost.org/#/dns_subdomains
### Configure the server
On the OVH panel, you will copy two element :
- the IPv6 address
- the IPv6 gateway address
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- the IPv6 prefix. On OVH's VPS SSD, prefixes are `/128` because you have only *one* IPv6 address.
On your VPS, create a backup of the network configuration with : `cp /etc/network/interfaces ~/interfaces` in home directory.
Then, you can edit the configuration file (`/etc/network/interfaces`) with the following. It is assumed that :
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< div class = "alert alert-warning" markdown = "1" >
In this example, it is assumed that your network interface is `eth0` . If it's different (check with `ip a` ) you need to adapt the example below.
< / div >
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```plaintext
iface eth0 inet6 static
address < your IPv6 address >
netmask < your IPv6 prefix >
post-up /sbin/ip -6 route add < the IPv6 gateway > dev eth0
post-up /sbin/ip -6 route add default via < the IPv6 gateway > dev eth0
pre-down /sbin/ip -6 route del default via < the IPv6 gateway > dev eth0
pre-down /sbin/ip -6 route del < the IPv6 gateway > dev eth0
```
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Now, save the file and restart the network service with : `service networking restart` . (TODO : ideally we should find a way to validate the content of the configuration, otherwise it could fuck up the network stack and get disconnected from the VPS ?)
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Check your configuration with these commands :
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- `ip a` to display network interfaces and addresses
- `hostname -I` to display the system IP addresses
- try to ping an IPv6 server (for example you can use `ping ip6.yunohost.org` )
- try to ping your server from your PC (assuming your PC has IPv6 enabled)
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If it's ok, it's ok !