>>> Peter Morrow <Peter.Morrow@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> schrieb am 06.05.2020 um 17:56 in Nachricht <21624_1588780597_5EB2DE35_21624_6_1_aa19cc55fd1846a2344357bfb5465a645993bf1a.ca el@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>: [...] >> >> You can turn that off if you like: IPv6DuplicateAddressDetection= > > This option worked well when I tried it (total time came down to > ~700ms) but unfortunately disabling it entirely isn't an option. > > FWIW setting CONFIG_IPV6_OPTIMISTIC_DAD=y in the kernel is providing a > good middle ground. As a note from real life: A major IT company claiming to be the horsepower for enterprises, (so to say) once sent out a replacement motherboard for a defective server, and when we powered up that server again, a storage system from the same company failed. As it turned out the new motherboard had the same MAC address as that storage system's NIC... When the technician suggested to replace the server motherboard again, I was asking whether it wouldn't be easier for all if the MAC address would be re-programmed. The technician said that it's impossible to change the MAC addresses... ;-) Long story put short: Tests for duplicate addresses DO make sense.... > > Peter. > > >> Lennart >> >> ‑‑ >> Lennart Poettering, Berlin > > > _______________________________________________ > systemd‑devel mailing list > systemd‑devel@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx > https://lists.freedesktop.org/mailman/listinfo/systemd‑devel _______________________________________________ systemd-devel mailing list systemd-devel@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx https://lists.freedesktop.org/mailman/listinfo/systemd-devel