On 16/04/2015 5:59 p.m., Alex Samad wrote: > On 16 April 2015 at 14:54, Amos Jeffries wrote: >> On 16/04/2015 3:20 p.m., Alex Samad wrote: >>> :) Living in Australia that has just sign into law meta data >>> recording. So I am sending some of my traffic OS via a vpn service. >>> >>> But I still want some things to go locally, so I was using src ip >>> address to help my router determine which path to use. >>> >>> unfortunately my vpn service doesn't handle IPv6, plus from memory >>> there is no NAT for ipv6 (last time i looked) so .. I want to allow >>> ipv6 for somethings but I want to force all traffic for certain site >>> via the vpn. >>> >>> >>> Unfortunately I might have to just kill all ipv6 .. >> >> Your best hope is actually to do the *opposite*. >> >> Make IPv6 actually work. You can firewall IPv6 traffic going to the >> selected set of sites IP ranges, just like you would block them if you >> didnt want IPv4 connections to go there. > > Hmm okay so your saying that squid will try the ipv6 address and if it > get a tcp reject (icmp), not available it will fail back to ipv4 ? > Yes. Well, it will fall back to the next route Squid is aware of. There may be multiple IPv4 and IPv6 routes being tested. Amos _______________________________________________ squid-users mailing list squid-users@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx http://lists.squid-cache.org/listinfo/squid-users