And the difference to DHCPv6-derived IPs is that SLAAC-provided IPs are pushed, i.e. they are applied immediately when the GUA prefix changes.
The only thing you do not have is "known" static IPv6s that you can reference in DNS names (because the prefix can change). Usually, you do not need them anyways, because you can always use the IPv4 for internal purposes in DNS. All of that is covered in the HOWTO I linked above.
The only thing you do not have is "known" static IPv6s that you can reference in DNS names (because the prefix can change). Usually, you do not need them anyways, because you can always use the IPv4 for internal purposes in DNS. All of that is covered in the HOWTO I linked above.
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