title: How to route IPv4 via IPv6 --- pub_date: 2020-02-10 --- author: ungleich network --- twitter_handle: ungleich --- _hidden: no --- _discoverable: yes --- abstract: Bringing IPv4 into the IPv6 world --- body: Imagine the following: you are running an IPv6 only network. And now someone asks you to pass IPv4 traffic through it, without tunneling it. Was sounds crazy at first, is actually quite feasible. ## A short routing recap Routers have routing tables. The routing tables basically say "if you receive a packet for this host, send it to that router". ![IP routing](/u/image/ip-routing.png) The important thing about this process is that the information on where to send it to, is **not in the packet**. ## How to send IPv4 packets via IPv6 Because the next hop is not written into the IPv4 packet, the router is free to forward the packet via any method it thinks is the best. And if that happens to be IPv6 - well, it will forward the IPv4 packet via an IPv6 neighbour. ## A practical example! In the IPv6 only coworking network in the [Digital Chalet](/u/projects/digital-chalet/), I can add an IPv4 default route via the IPv6 router: ``` [root@diamond ~]# ip route add 0/0 nexthop via inet6 fe80::21b:21ff:febb:6934 dev wlp0s20f3 [root@diamond ~]# ip r default via inet6 fe80::21b:21ff:febb:6934 dev wlp0s20f3 [root@diamond ~]# ``` Now to be able to actually transmit IPv4 packets, I do need a source IPv4 address. In the current network I can use an address in the unused 10.0.8.0/22 network: ``` ip addr add 10.0.8.42/32 dev wlp0s20f3 [root@diamond ~]# ip r default via inet6 fe80::21b:21ff:febb:6934 dev wlp0s20f3 [root@diamond ~]# ip a sh dev wlp0s20f3 2: wlp0s20f3: mtu 1500 qdisc noqueue state UP group default qlen 1000 link/ether 24:ee:9a:54:c3:bf brd ff:ff:ff:ff:ff:ff inet 10.0.8.42/32 scope global wlp0s20f3 valid_lft forever preferred_lft forever inet6 2a0a:e5c0:0:4:c6ea:b1a8:ec14:6f35/64 scope global dynamic mngtmpaddr noprefixroute valid_lft 86400sec preferred_lft 14400sec inet6 fe80::3b98:cb58:ed02:c25/64 scope link valid_lft forever preferred_lft forever [root@diamond ~]# ``` And I can indeed ping another IPv4 address, routed via IPv6! ``` [root@diamond ~]# ping -4 10.0.8.3 PING 10.0.8.3 (10.0.8.3) 56(84) bytes of data. 64 bytes from 10.0.8.3: icmp_seq=1 ttl=64 time=2.37 ms ^C --- 10.0.8.3 ping statistics --- 1 packets transmitted, 1 received, 0% packet loss, time 0ms rtt min/avg/max/mdev = 2.365/2.365/2.365/0.000 ms [root@diamond ~]# ``` ## Do it yourself If you don't believe us that it is possible, you can test it yourself on IPv6 only VMs on [IPv6OnlyHosting.com](https://ipv6onlyhosting.com).