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Joined 2 months ago
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Cake day: September 30th, 2025

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  • Well, your router is trying, but your ISP isn’t replying, so I’d say you don’t have IPv6 yet.

    I have had ISPs where if you send a bunch of DHCP solicits/discovers too quickly, then they stop replying. So maybe disable DHCPv6 for a few hours, and enable it while watching it on the packet sniffer, incase it sends a weird response.

    Also it shouldn’t make any difference, but in IPv6/ND change all to bridge; your router looks like it’s advertising itself as a default route to your ISP’s router, and that just seems wrong.


  • I see is coming from a couple of Amcrest cameras

    Oh yeah, that still seems to be from your LAN. On the Mikrotik set your WAN interface in the filters tab of the packet sniffer. Also if you haven’t already, your WAN shouldn’t be bridged with your LAN, since your router will route between them, a bridge is like a network switch.

    Basically I’d like to see the Router Solicitation on your WAN from your Router, and hope that your ISP responds back with a Router Advertisement; or a Solicit for DHCPv6, and the whole exchange.

    Also 2001:470:1f06:redacted looks like a Hurricane Electric IP.


  • It’s even weirder than just an NZ company too:

    While MetraWeather is the official supplier of lightning data to the BOM, it is a US weather company called AccuWeather that owns and maintains the Australian Lightning Network.

    Also I haven’t heard great things about those “relatively cheap” AS3935 sensors, and personally haven’t had much luck using one with ESP Home.










  • SR-IOV works by presenting one device as many, which you can passthrough one of those to your VM. Meaning SR-IOV only works through PCIe passthrough, so you’d have to figure that out first. The GPU guides should get you most of the way there.

    Some distros include an ACS patch into their kernel (e.g. Proxmox, and I think CachyOS), which lets you passthrough devices without hardware support (but lacking some security features).

    I believe it might be possible to ‘passthrough’ the VF from the host without PCIe passthrough (I’ve only done this with containers though), but performance is often worse than just using a bridge.





  • Probably an unpopular opinion, but I don’t actually mind it. There’s now a bunch of layers that are selectable on the radar page itself, which were either nonexistent or hard to find on the old site. There’s an easy to understand hourly forecast, instead of the text only one (which is still there), and I had no problem finding the 7 day forecast. Also there’s finally HTTPS by default!

    Of course if you don’t like it, this still seems to work for the old website: https://reg.bom.gov.au/