Prepare a VM guest OS for IPv6
Big picture
Prepare a VM guest OS for IPv6.
How to
OpenStack (not Calico) controls whether a VM gets IPv4, IPv6, or both addresses. Calico simply honors the addresses that OpenStack specifies. The following extra steps are required for IPv6 only and dual stack deployments — so the guest OS can learn its IPv6 address (if assigned by OpenStack).
Verify that the guest VM image meets these requirements for IPv6 connectivity.
- When booting up, the VM must issue a DHCPv6 request for each of its interfaces, so that it can learn the IPv6 addresses that OpenStack allocates for it. If the VM uses the widely-deployed DHCP client from ISC, it must have a fix/workaround for this known issue.
- The VM must be configured to accept router advertisements.
Although not all common cloud images meet these requirements yet, it is easy to remedy by launching an image, making appropriate changes to its configuration files, taking a snapshot, and then using the snapshot thereafter instead of the original image.
For example, starting from an Ubuntu cloud image, the following changes meet the requirements listed.
In
/etc/network/interfaces.d/eth0.cfg
, add:iface eth0 inet6 dhcp
accept_ra 1
In
/sbin/dhclient-script
, add at the start of the script:new_ip6_prefixlen=128
In
/etc/sysctl.d
, create a file named30-eth0-rs-delay.conf
with contents:net.ipv6.conf.eth0.router_solicitation_delay = 10
For CentOS, these additions to a cloud-init script have been reported to be effective:
runcmd:
- sed -i -e ‘$a’”IPV6INIT=yes” /etc/sysconfig/network-scripts/ifcfg-eth0
- sed -i -e ‘$a’”DHCPV6C=yes” /etc/sysconfig/network-scripts/ifcfg-eth0
- sed -i ‘/PATH/i\new_ip6_prefixlen=128’ /sbin/dhclient-script
- systemctl restart network
Configure IPv6 support in Calico by defining an IPv6 subnet in each Neutron network with:
- The IPv6 address range that you want your VMs to use
- DHCP enabled
- IPv6 address mode set to DHCPv6 stateful
We suggest that you initially configure both IPv4 and IPv6 subnets in each network. This allows handling VM images that support only IPv4 alongside those that support both IPv4 and IPv6, and allows a VM to be accessed over IPv4 in case this is needed to troubleshoot any issues with its IPv6 configuration. In principle, though, we are not aware of any problems with configuring and using IPv6-only networks in OpenStack.