JD> No idea. Also no idea where to check. The only way I even got a Wan JD> address was to set it to Dynamic. I have a native IPv6, and was JD> assigned a /64 and a /56 address. I have no idea where to inser that JD> prefix, although I was told by Teksavvy what it was. The setup is JD> strange to me, with no help files, and the user manual is less then JD> helpfull.
I'm guessing that the /64 is the IP assigned to the WAN interface and the /56 is for your LAN. I had a look at my router config, and all I have in it is to enable IPv6 support and "always use native IPv6". Although my WAN address is static, it is assigned by the ISP (same for IPv4), so the router is setup to automatically obtain the IPv6 address. So you having to obtain a "dynamic" IP does make sense. I'd check the address obtained and see if it matches any that you've given.
I don't know if you need to turn on router advertisements in your router for the LAN. If you do, turn them on. It's a bit hard not being able to see your router's interface, so I'm doing educated guesses.
... My other vehicle is a Galaxy Class Starship ... --- MultiMail/Win32 v0.49 * Origin: Freeway BBS - freeway.apana.org.au (3:633/410)