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That requires running it on the router/device which gets the public IP address. By using the service you can update your DNS IP address on a system that is behind the router.



What do you mean?

Every device gets a public ipv6 (usually).


I have a router connected to the internet, it gets the public IP address.

The router is connected to the internal network in my home and has the IP address of 192.168.1.1.

Behind the router is my computer which has a non-public IP address, for example 192.168.1.2. My computer is the one I want to run the program to update the DNS entry. My computer does not know what the public IP address is by looking at its interfaces.


We're talking ipv6 not ipv4


I think the same situation applies for IPv6 if you are behind a router.


No, it doesn't


I'll agree to disagree :)



As I've said before. The server behind the router does not have a public IPv6 address. It is NATed to the Internet. Getting the internal IPv6 address is useless for this case.

I do not like to have the servers/computers that are on the internal home network directly connected to the Internet.


Nating in the context of ipv6 is not a common thing. It is the exception, while it's the rule for ipv4




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