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Directives are case-insensitive. A comprehensive list of the supported directives follows:
The use of Miredo as a Teredo client allows nodes to get an IPv6 connectivity from behind a NAT router device, as it tunnels IPv6 packets over UDP/IPv4 with special support for NAT routers. Routers of that kind usually only forward TCP, UDP, and some ICMP, IPv4 packets (with some limitation).
NOTE: Use of Miredo as a Teredo client is possible even if the system already has IPv6 connectivity through another way (native, 6to4, TSP, etc). In that case, Miredo will only be used to reach other Teredo clients, as its tunneling interface has a default route with a higher metric (which is to say a lower priority) than the other network interfaces.
Teredo relays forward IPv6 packets between Teredo clients and the IPv6 Internet. For that to work, Teredo relays MUST have a working IPv6 connectivity through a way distinct from Teredo tunneling (native, 6to4, ISATAP, etc).
Warning: This mode should only be used if the node has a public IPv4 address, or if it is behind a full cone NAT-router with proper port forwarding rules. Otherwise the tunnel will NOT WORK PROPERLY. Note that many NAT port forwarding implementations are broken.
This directive MUST be specified when Miredo is in client mode. hostname must resolve to a valid IPv4 address. If it is not present, and no server hostname is specified on the command line when starting miredo either, the program will fail.
The default value is 2001:0000::.
Do not use that directive if you don't know what you are doing, as it is more than likely to break your Teredo connectivity. That option must not be used when Miredo serves as a Teredo client.
Use this option if you have trouble with the default value, such as if you have a multi-homed host with equal-cost IPv4 routing, or if you have specific firewalling constraints.
Use this option if you have firewalling constraints which can cause Miredo to fail when not using a fixed predefined port.
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