infomaniak IPv6 issues
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@Gengar Well. Unfortunately, for me , the server goes unreachable periodically. As in IPv4. Do you hit the same? The whole thing is unstable connectivity wise.
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@girish & @joseph , I've reached out to Infomaniak on tuesday and they told me the following today :
Bonjour,
Après demande, nos experts Cloud sont au courant du problème rencontré. Pour le moment, nous n’avons pas encore de solution définitive.
En attendant, une solution temporaire serait de configurer un renouvellement du DHCPv6 via un cron toutes les 12 heures. Cela devrait permettre d’éviter ce type de désagrément jusqu’à ce qu’une correction soit mise en place.
Soyez assuré que ce point est bien pris en compte dans notre liste des tâches à traiter. Il sera priorisé dès que possible.
Merci pour votre patience et votre compréhension.
Merci pour votre confiance. Nous restons à votre disposition.I will try to do what they suggest and we will see if it's a working workaround or not...
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@girish & @joseph , I've reached out to Infomaniak on tuesday and they told me the following today :
Bonjour,
Après demande, nos experts Cloud sont au courant du problème rencontré. Pour le moment, nous n’avons pas encore de solution définitive.
En attendant, une solution temporaire serait de configurer un renouvellement du DHCPv6 via un cron toutes les 12 heures. Cela devrait permettre d’éviter ce type de désagrément jusqu’à ce qu’une correction soit mise en place.
Soyez assuré que ce point est bien pris en compte dans notre liste des tâches à traiter. Il sera priorisé dès que possible.
Merci pour votre patience et votre compréhension.
Merci pour votre confiance. Nous restons à votre disposition.I will try to do what they suggest and we will see if it's a working workaround or not...
@Gengar said in infomaniak IPv6 issues:
Bonjour,
Après demande, nos experts Cloud sont au courant du problème rencontré. Pour le moment, nous n’avons pas encore de solution définitive.
En attendant, une solution temporaire serait de configurer un renouvellement du DHCPv6 via un cron toutes les 12 heures. Cela devrait permettre d’éviter ce type de désagrément jusqu’à ce qu’une correction soit mise en place.
Soyez assuré que ce point est bien pris en compte dans notre liste des tâches à traiter. Il sera priorisé dès que possible.
Merci pour votre patience et votre compréhension.
Merci pour votre confiance. Nous restons à votre disposition.Translation:
Hello,
Our Cloud experts are aware of the problem you are experiencing. For the moment, we don't have a definitive solution yet.
In the meantime, a temporary solution would be to configure a DHCPv6 renewal via a cron every 12 hours. This should avoid this type of inconvenience until a fix is in place.
Rest assured that this point is well taken into account in our to-do list. It will be prioritized as soon as possible.
Thank you for your patience and understanding.
We are grateful for your confidence. We look forward to hearing from you. -
Hey everyone & @joseph & @girish ,
I wanted to share an update regarding the IPv6 lease renewal issue I'm experiencing on my VPS hosted at Infomaniak, in case others are hitting similar problems.
After reaching out to Infomaniak support a few days/weeks ago, they acknowledged the issue and suggested a temporary workaround: running a cron job every 12 hours to trigger a DHCPv6 renewal. While I appreciated the suggestion, I’ve run a series of tests and unfortunately none of the commonly available methods for forcing a lease renewal actually work reliably on my system.
The instance runs Ubuntu 24.04 Server, which uses
systemd-networkd
via Netplan. Here's a quick summary of what I tried:networkctl renew <interface>
: No effect, no logs, no renewal.systemctl restart systemd-networkd
: Breaks IPv6 completely (no address is reacquired).systemctl reload systemd-networkd
: No effect.- Full IPv6 stack reset (disable/enable IPv6 +
netplan apply
+ Docker restart): Works, but too disruptive. - Reboot: The only consistently working method, but not viable on a 24/7 system.
Interestingly, I found this systemd bug on their GitHub Issues which describes very similar symptoms—
systemd-networkd
seems to not renew IPv6 lease even withnetworkctl renew <interface>
.After a long tcpdump session (about 17:30 CEST to 09:20 the next day) on my VPS, I confirmed the following:
- My server sends DHCPv6
RENEW
messages. - Infomaniak’s OpenStack-based infrastructure replies correctly with a
REPLY
containing a new lease (24h, with valid preferred/valid lifetimes). - Despite that, my client doesn’t apply the lease, continues renewing until T2 expires, then sends multiple
REBIND
messages. - Eventually, the client sends a DHCPv6
RELEASE
.
So far, Infomaniak’s support has been excellent. They confirmed via a tcpdump on their OpenStack DHCPv6 server that the
REPLY
messages are correctly formed and sent in response to myRENEW
requests. From their logs, my client also appears to receive these replies — but doesn't act on them properly. I was able to confirm the same behavior with a tcpdump I ran locally on my VPS:RENEW
is sent,REPLY
is received, yet the lease is not renewed, leading to a fallback toREBIND
and eventually aRELEASE
.Based on what other forum members mentioned, this behavior does not seem to occur on providers like Hetzner. That might be because Hetzner's DHCPv6 implementation handles edge cases like
REBIND
with lifetime=0 more gracefully even when lifetimes are set to zero — whereas Infomaniak’s current setup might not interpret these ambiguous packets well (even though they are technically valid per RFC 8415).According to RFC 8415 §21.6, clients should set
preferred-lifetime
andvalid-lifetime
to 0 inRENEW
andREBIND
messages. Servers must ignore these values. This means my client is doing things correctly, but perhaps the server isn’t ignoring the values as it should.
Request to the community:
If anyone is using a VPS at Hetzner with Ubuntu 24.04, could you please run a shorttcpdump
capture and open it in Wireshark?
Apply the filterdhcpv6
and check if your IPv6 lease is successfully renewed after aRENEW
/REPLY
exchange — or if it only happens afterREBIND
.That would help understand why it works with Hetzner and doesn't work with Infomaniak.
I suspect there is a general issue with systemd that doesn't takes into account the
REPLY
. And if it's the case it would means it works on Hetzner only because theREBIND
packet is answered differently by their DHCPv6 than how Infomaniak handles it.Thanks in advance!
Cheers,
Gengar -
Hey again everyone & @joseph & @girish,
Following up on my previous post regarding the IPv6 lease renewal issue on Infomaniak’s VPS — I’ve done some deeper testing by ordering a VPS on Hetzner to compare how things were set up between Hetzner and Infomaniak.
My idea was to launch a
tcpdump
on a Hetzner VPS (running Ubuntu 24.04 with systemd 255, just like Infomaniak) to observe DHCPv6 behavior — but first, I needed to know how long their IPv6 lease lasts in order to avoid capturing traffic for too many hours unnecessarily.So I started out by doing a:
ip -6 address show dev <interface>
on the freshly provisioned Hetzner VPS.
And what a surprise! No lease at all. See below:
2: <interface>: <BROADCAST,MULTICAST,UP,LOWER_UP> mtu 1500 qdisc fq_codel state UP group default qlen 1000 inet6 my_public_ipv6 scope global valid_lft forever preferred_lft forever inet6 my_ipv6_unicast_link_local_address scope link valid_lft forever preferred_lft forever
Both
valid_lft
andpreferred_lft
are set toforever
.To confirm how the interface was configured, I also checked Netplan:
sudo cat /etc/netplan/*.yaml
And here is the configuration:
network: version: 2 ethernets: <interface>: match: macaddress: "my_mac" addresses: - "my_public_ipv6" nameservers: addresses: - 2a01:4ff:ff00::add:2 - 2a01:4ff:ff00::add:1 dhcp4: true set-name: "<interface>" routes: - to: "default" via: "fe80::1" on-link: true
This confirms that IPv6 is statically configured on Hetzner. There's no
dhcp6: true
, and the IPv6 address is explicitly assigned. Therefore, no lease exists, and no renewal occurs. There’s no interaction with any DHCPv6 server — noRENEW
,REBIND
, orRELEASE
. This directly explains why the issue observed at Infomaniak never manifests on Hetzner: the client never enters the renewal cycle in the first place.In contrast, here’s what we get on Infomaniak:
ip -6 address show dev <interface>
Output:
2: <interface>: <BROADCAST,MULTICAST,UP,LOWER_UP> mtu 1500 qdisc mq state UP group default qlen 1000 altname <interface_alt> inet6 my_public_ipv6 scope global dynamic noprefixroute valid_lft 65046sec preferred_lft 65046sec inet6 my_ipv6_unicast_link_local_address scope link valid_lft forever preferred_lft forever
This time, we clearly see the
dynamic
flag and a limited lease time (~18 hours remaining when the command was run), indicating a DHCPv6 assignment.To double-check, I also reviewed the Netplan config on Infomaniak:
sudo cat /etc/netplan/*.yaml
network: version: 2 ethernets: <interface>: match: macaddress: "my_mac" dhcp4: true dhcp6: true accept-ra: true set-name: "<interface>" mtu: 1500
This confirms that both
dhcp6: true
is enabled — meaning the system explicitly requests an IPv6 lease from the DHCPv6 server.This explains why the issue is completely absent at Hetzner — their static configuration avoids the renewal mechanism entirely, so the "potentially" buggy part of
systemd-networkd
(which fails to apply the receivedREPLY
from a DHCPv6RENEW
) is never triggered. On Infomaniak, where renewal is mandatory, the problem becomes immediately visible as soon as the system enters the lease refresh cycle.I’m now wrapping up my investigation and will send my findings to Infomaniak.
Have a good one,
Gengar -
Hey again everyone & @joseph & @girish,
Following up on my previous post regarding the IPv6 lease renewal issue on Infomaniak’s VPS — I’ve done some deeper testing by ordering a VPS on Hetzner to compare how things were set up between Hetzner and Infomaniak.
My idea was to launch a
tcpdump
on a Hetzner VPS (running Ubuntu 24.04 with systemd 255, just like Infomaniak) to observe DHCPv6 behavior — but first, I needed to know how long their IPv6 lease lasts in order to avoid capturing traffic for too many hours unnecessarily.So I started out by doing a:
ip -6 address show dev <interface>
on the freshly provisioned Hetzner VPS.
And what a surprise! No lease at all. See below:
2: <interface>: <BROADCAST,MULTICAST,UP,LOWER_UP> mtu 1500 qdisc fq_codel state UP group default qlen 1000 inet6 my_public_ipv6 scope global valid_lft forever preferred_lft forever inet6 my_ipv6_unicast_link_local_address scope link valid_lft forever preferred_lft forever
Both
valid_lft
andpreferred_lft
are set toforever
.To confirm how the interface was configured, I also checked Netplan:
sudo cat /etc/netplan/*.yaml
And here is the configuration:
network: version: 2 ethernets: <interface>: match: macaddress: "my_mac" addresses: - "my_public_ipv6" nameservers: addresses: - 2a01:4ff:ff00::add:2 - 2a01:4ff:ff00::add:1 dhcp4: true set-name: "<interface>" routes: - to: "default" via: "fe80::1" on-link: true
This confirms that IPv6 is statically configured on Hetzner. There's no
dhcp6: true
, and the IPv6 address is explicitly assigned. Therefore, no lease exists, and no renewal occurs. There’s no interaction with any DHCPv6 server — noRENEW
,REBIND
, orRELEASE
. This directly explains why the issue observed at Infomaniak never manifests on Hetzner: the client never enters the renewal cycle in the first place.In contrast, here’s what we get on Infomaniak:
ip -6 address show dev <interface>
Output:
2: <interface>: <BROADCAST,MULTICAST,UP,LOWER_UP> mtu 1500 qdisc mq state UP group default qlen 1000 altname <interface_alt> inet6 my_public_ipv6 scope global dynamic noprefixroute valid_lft 65046sec preferred_lft 65046sec inet6 my_ipv6_unicast_link_local_address scope link valid_lft forever preferred_lft forever
This time, we clearly see the
dynamic
flag and a limited lease time (~18 hours remaining when the command was run), indicating a DHCPv6 assignment.To double-check, I also reviewed the Netplan config on Infomaniak:
sudo cat /etc/netplan/*.yaml
network: version: 2 ethernets: <interface>: match: macaddress: "my_mac" dhcp4: true dhcp6: true accept-ra: true set-name: "<interface>" mtu: 1500
This confirms that both
dhcp6: true
is enabled — meaning the system explicitly requests an IPv6 lease from the DHCPv6 server.This explains why the issue is completely absent at Hetzner — their static configuration avoids the renewal mechanism entirely, so the "potentially" buggy part of
systemd-networkd
(which fails to apply the receivedREPLY
from a DHCPv6RENEW
) is never triggered. On Infomaniak, where renewal is mandatory, the problem becomes immediately visible as soon as the system enters the lease refresh cycle.I’m now wrapping up my investigation and will send my findings to Infomaniak.
Have a good one,
Gengar -
TLDR : DHCPv6 Issue comes from Cloudron ip6table rules.
TL;DR: The issue with DHCPv6 not working on Cloudron installations on Infomaniak VPS stems from the fact that the required UDP port 546 (client) is not opened in Cloudron's default ip6tables ruleset. Based on RFC 8415, this port needs to be explicitly opened for DHCPv6 to work correctly. @staff, could you please patch
cloudron-firewall.sh
GitLab to allow traffic on UDP port 546 (client) from port 547 (server), as required by RFC 8415 §7.2 ?7.2. UDP Ports Clients listen for DHCP messages on UDP port 546. Servers and relay agents listen for DHCP messages on UDP port 547.
This ip6tables rule fixes the problem:
sudo ip6tables -I INPUT -p udp --sport 547 --dport 546 -j ACCEPT
A summary of the whole story
A few weeks ago, I started using Cloudron for the first time on an Infomaniak VPS and quickly encountered an issue with my PTR6 record. After about 24 hours, the PTR6 value would switch to
null
. Upon further inspection, I noticed that my server was losing its IPv6 address. According to my netplan configuration, the lease of my ipv6 address should be renewed via DHCPv6, but the only workaround I found was to reboot the server every 24 hours to renew the lease.I contacted Infomaniak support, and they confirmed via tcpdump that their DHCPv6 server was sending the correct packets — but it looked like my client wasn't properly renewing the lease. That’s when I dove deep into DHCPv6, and eventually came across RFC 8415, the definitive spec on how DHCPv6 works.
I started capturing traffic with tcpdump, comparing behavior between my Infomaniak VPS (with Cloudron) and a Hetzner VPS. Later, I added a third machine — another Infomaniak VPS, but this time without Cloudron installed.
I quickly learned how IPv6 lease renewals work and dove into a detailed troubleshooting journey. After several emails and sharing tcpdumps, Infomaniak support eventually replied (translated from French):
Hello,
After several days of investigation, we were unable to reproduce the issue on our machines, whether under Ubuntu 24 or other Debian-based systems. We have validated that our DHCP server is not the cause, and the issue most likely originates from your operating system.
It may also be related to a specific configuration of your system, which could explain the difficulty in establishing an IPv6 connection.
Our OpenStack DHCP server (based on dnsmasq) is compliant with RFC 8415 and ignores certain fields as per section 18.3.3 of that RFC.
Since you are the first client to encounter this issue and we were unable to reproduce it, we recommend setting the IPv6 address statically to solve the problem.
This made me even more curious — especially since their initial reply seemed to imply they already knew there were some IPv6 issues?! So I created another Infomaniak VPS with the exact same OS (Ubuntu 24.04 with systemd v255) — but did not install Cloudron.
And voilà — it worked flawlessly. IPv6 was stable, leases were renewed automatically, and there were no interruptions.
That’s when I knew: the problem wasn’t Infomaniak, Ubuntu, or systemd. It was Cloudron.
Digging deeper into RFC 8415, I reviewed the relevant packet exchange logic. Section 7.3 provides a full breakdown of DHCPv6 message types:
7.3. DHCP Message Types DHCP defines the following message types. The formats of these messages are provided in Sections8 and9. Additional message types have been defined and may be defined in the future; see <https://www.iana.org/assignments/dhcpv6-parameters>. The numeric encoding for each message type is shown in parentheses. SOLICIT (1) A client sends a Solicit message to locate servers. ADVERTISE (2) A server sends an Advertise message to indicate that it is available for DHCP service, in response to a Solicit message received from a client. REQUEST (3) A client sends a Request message to request configuration parameters, including addresses and/or delegated prefixes, from a specific server. CONFIRM (4) A client sends a Confirm message to any available server to determine whether the addresses it was assigned are still appropriate to the link to which the client is connected. RENEW (5) A client sends a Renew message to the server that originally provided the client's leases and configuration parameters to extend the lifetimes on the leases assigned to the client and to update other configuration parameters. REBIND (6) A client sends a Rebind message to any available server to extend the lifetimes on the leases assigned to the client and to update other configuration parameters; this message is sent after a client receives no response to a Renew message. REPLY (7) A server sends a Reply message containing assigned leases and configuration parameters in response to a Solicit, Request, Renew, or Rebind message received from a client. A server sends a Reply message containing configuration parameters in response to an Information-request message. A server sends a Reply message in response to a Confirm message confirming or denying that the addresses assigned to the client are appropriate to the link to which the client is connected. A server sends a Reply message to acknowledge receipt of a Release or Decline message. RELEASE (8) A client sends a Release message to the server that assigned leases to the client to indicate that the client will no longer use one or more of the assigned leases. DECLINE (9) A client sends a Decline message to a server to indicate that the client has determined that one or more addresses assigned by the server are already in use on the link to which the client is connected. RECONFIGURE (10) A server sends a Reconfigure message to a client to inform the client that the server has new or updated configuration parameters and that the client is to initiate a Renew/Reply, Rebind/Reply, or Information-request/Reply transaction with the server in order to receive the updated information. INFORMATION-REQUEST (11) A client sends an Information-request message to a server to request configuration parameters without the assignment of any leases to the client. RELAY-FORW (12) A relay agent sends a Relay-forward message to relay messages to servers, either directly or through another relay agent. The received message -- either a client message or a Relay-forward message from another relay agent -- is encapsulated in an option in the Relay-forward message. RELAY-REPL (13) A server sends a Relay-reply message to a relay agent containing a message that the relay agent delivers to a client. The Relay-reply message may be relayed by other relay agents for delivery to the destination relay agent. The server encapsulates the client message as an option in the Relay-reply message, which the relay agent extracts and relays to the client.
(Source: RFC 8415 §7.3)
What I observed in the packet capture from my Infomaniak VPS WITH Cloudron installed:
- At T1: the client (Cloudron server) sends a RENEW.
- The DHCPv6 server replies with a REPLY.
- But the client doesn't apply the reply. It’s as if it silently discards the packet.
- The client repeats the RENEW cycle until T2.
- At T2: the client sends REBIND messages — again, no response.
- The client repeats the REBIND cycle until the end of the lease.
- Finally, the client sends a RELEASE, and the IPv6 address is dropped.
Meanwhile, on my other Infomaniak VPS without Cloudron, it all works fine:
- A RENEW is sent
- A REPLY is received and applied — done.
So what was Cloudron doing differently?
I restarted reading RFC 8415 more carefully and then found this in section 7.2:
7.2. UDP Ports Clients listen for DHCP messages on UDP port 546. Servers and relay agents listen for DHCP messages on UDP port 547.
(Source: RFC 8415 §7.2)
That’s it! The REPLY packets from the DHCPv6 server come from port 547 to port 546 — but Cloudron's ip6tables rules don’t allow this.
I reviewed the Cloudron firewall script here:
https://git.cloudron.io/platform/box/-/blob/master/setup/start/cloudron-firewall.shAnd yes — this rule was missing.
I verified ip6tables on my Infomaniak VPS with Cloudron and found that it wasn't explicitly allowed, so it's dropped.
But on my non-Cloudron Infomaniak VPS, ip6tables was completely open and allowed this traffic.
I added this rule manually on my Infomaniak VPS with Cloudron:
sudo ip6tables -I INPUT -p udp --sport 547 --dport 546 -j ACCEPT
Boom. Everything worked. DHCPv6 leases were renewed, no more dropped IPv6, and my PTR6 issue was gone. It’s now been 72 hours and everything remains stable.
Hetzner users don’t encounter this because they’re given static IPv6 addresses, meaning no DHCPv6 exchange is needed. But any provider (like Infomaniak) that uses dynamic IPv6 with DHCPv6 will hit this issue.
The fix
To gain proper DHCPv6 support in Cloudron, add this rule:
ip6tables -I INPUT -p udp --sport 547 --dport 546 -j ACCEPT
But ideally, this rule should be added in
cloudron-firewall.sh
(I guess it's here ? And if not only there, then integrated into the firewall setup logic for Cloudron installations.)
Final thoughts
This was not a systemd bug nor an Infomaniak issue. This was a firewall missing configuration on Cloudron’s part — and it only becomes visible in DHCPv6 environments.
@Girish @Nebulon @joseph , could you please consider updating the Cloudron firewall to include this rule?
Now that Infomaniak works flawlessly with Cloudron (IPv6 included), perhaps you could also consider integrating them into Cloudron as a DNS provider using their API?
Feature request: Add DNS provider Infomaniak => Please people reading this thread, upvote this feature request to have a new provider
Thanks for reading — I hope this helps others avoid the days of debugging I went through!
Cheers!
Gengar
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TLDR : DHCPv6 Issue comes from Cloudron ip6table rules.
TL;DR: The issue with DHCPv6 not working on Cloudron installations on Infomaniak VPS stems from the fact that the required UDP port 546 (client) is not opened in Cloudron's default ip6tables ruleset. Based on RFC 8415, this port needs to be explicitly opened for DHCPv6 to work correctly. @staff, could you please patch
cloudron-firewall.sh
GitLab to allow traffic on UDP port 546 (client) from port 547 (server), as required by RFC 8415 §7.2 ?7.2. UDP Ports Clients listen for DHCP messages on UDP port 546. Servers and relay agents listen for DHCP messages on UDP port 547.
This ip6tables rule fixes the problem:
sudo ip6tables -I INPUT -p udp --sport 547 --dport 546 -j ACCEPT
A summary of the whole story
A few weeks ago, I started using Cloudron for the first time on an Infomaniak VPS and quickly encountered an issue with my PTR6 record. After about 24 hours, the PTR6 value would switch to
null
. Upon further inspection, I noticed that my server was losing its IPv6 address. According to my netplan configuration, the lease of my ipv6 address should be renewed via DHCPv6, but the only workaround I found was to reboot the server every 24 hours to renew the lease.I contacted Infomaniak support, and they confirmed via tcpdump that their DHCPv6 server was sending the correct packets — but it looked like my client wasn't properly renewing the lease. That’s when I dove deep into DHCPv6, and eventually came across RFC 8415, the definitive spec on how DHCPv6 works.
I started capturing traffic with tcpdump, comparing behavior between my Infomaniak VPS (with Cloudron) and a Hetzner VPS. Later, I added a third machine — another Infomaniak VPS, but this time without Cloudron installed.
I quickly learned how IPv6 lease renewals work and dove into a detailed troubleshooting journey. After several emails and sharing tcpdumps, Infomaniak support eventually replied (translated from French):
Hello,
After several days of investigation, we were unable to reproduce the issue on our machines, whether under Ubuntu 24 or other Debian-based systems. We have validated that our DHCP server is not the cause, and the issue most likely originates from your operating system.
It may also be related to a specific configuration of your system, which could explain the difficulty in establishing an IPv6 connection.
Our OpenStack DHCP server (based on dnsmasq) is compliant with RFC 8415 and ignores certain fields as per section 18.3.3 of that RFC.
Since you are the first client to encounter this issue and we were unable to reproduce it, we recommend setting the IPv6 address statically to solve the problem.
This made me even more curious — especially since their initial reply seemed to imply they already knew there were some IPv6 issues?! So I created another Infomaniak VPS with the exact same OS (Ubuntu 24.04 with systemd v255) — but did not install Cloudron.
And voilà — it worked flawlessly. IPv6 was stable, leases were renewed automatically, and there were no interruptions.
That’s when I knew: the problem wasn’t Infomaniak, Ubuntu, or systemd. It was Cloudron.
Digging deeper into RFC 8415, I reviewed the relevant packet exchange logic. Section 7.3 provides a full breakdown of DHCPv6 message types:
7.3. DHCP Message Types DHCP defines the following message types. The formats of these messages are provided in Sections8 and9. Additional message types have been defined and may be defined in the future; see <https://www.iana.org/assignments/dhcpv6-parameters>. The numeric encoding for each message type is shown in parentheses. SOLICIT (1) A client sends a Solicit message to locate servers. ADVERTISE (2) A server sends an Advertise message to indicate that it is available for DHCP service, in response to a Solicit message received from a client. REQUEST (3) A client sends a Request message to request configuration parameters, including addresses and/or delegated prefixes, from a specific server. CONFIRM (4) A client sends a Confirm message to any available server to determine whether the addresses it was assigned are still appropriate to the link to which the client is connected. RENEW (5) A client sends a Renew message to the server that originally provided the client's leases and configuration parameters to extend the lifetimes on the leases assigned to the client and to update other configuration parameters. REBIND (6) A client sends a Rebind message to any available server to extend the lifetimes on the leases assigned to the client and to update other configuration parameters; this message is sent after a client receives no response to a Renew message. REPLY (7) A server sends a Reply message containing assigned leases and configuration parameters in response to a Solicit, Request, Renew, or Rebind message received from a client. A server sends a Reply message containing configuration parameters in response to an Information-request message. A server sends a Reply message in response to a Confirm message confirming or denying that the addresses assigned to the client are appropriate to the link to which the client is connected. A server sends a Reply message to acknowledge receipt of a Release or Decline message. RELEASE (8) A client sends a Release message to the server that assigned leases to the client to indicate that the client will no longer use one or more of the assigned leases. DECLINE (9) A client sends a Decline message to a server to indicate that the client has determined that one or more addresses assigned by the server are already in use on the link to which the client is connected. RECONFIGURE (10) A server sends a Reconfigure message to a client to inform the client that the server has new or updated configuration parameters and that the client is to initiate a Renew/Reply, Rebind/Reply, or Information-request/Reply transaction with the server in order to receive the updated information. INFORMATION-REQUEST (11) A client sends an Information-request message to a server to request configuration parameters without the assignment of any leases to the client. RELAY-FORW (12) A relay agent sends a Relay-forward message to relay messages to servers, either directly or through another relay agent. The received message -- either a client message or a Relay-forward message from another relay agent -- is encapsulated in an option in the Relay-forward message. RELAY-REPL (13) A server sends a Relay-reply message to a relay agent containing a message that the relay agent delivers to a client. The Relay-reply message may be relayed by other relay agents for delivery to the destination relay agent. The server encapsulates the client message as an option in the Relay-reply message, which the relay agent extracts and relays to the client.
(Source: RFC 8415 §7.3)
What I observed in the packet capture from my Infomaniak VPS WITH Cloudron installed:
- At T1: the client (Cloudron server) sends a RENEW.
- The DHCPv6 server replies with a REPLY.
- But the client doesn't apply the reply. It’s as if it silently discards the packet.
- The client repeats the RENEW cycle until T2.
- At T2: the client sends REBIND messages — again, no response.
- The client repeats the REBIND cycle until the end of the lease.
- Finally, the client sends a RELEASE, and the IPv6 address is dropped.
Meanwhile, on my other Infomaniak VPS without Cloudron, it all works fine:
- A RENEW is sent
- A REPLY is received and applied — done.
So what was Cloudron doing differently?
I restarted reading RFC 8415 more carefully and then found this in section 7.2:
7.2. UDP Ports Clients listen for DHCP messages on UDP port 546. Servers and relay agents listen for DHCP messages on UDP port 547.
(Source: RFC 8415 §7.2)
That’s it! The REPLY packets from the DHCPv6 server come from port 547 to port 546 — but Cloudron's ip6tables rules don’t allow this.
I reviewed the Cloudron firewall script here:
https://git.cloudron.io/platform/box/-/blob/master/setup/start/cloudron-firewall.shAnd yes — this rule was missing.
I verified ip6tables on my Infomaniak VPS with Cloudron and found that it wasn't explicitly allowed, so it's dropped.
But on my non-Cloudron Infomaniak VPS, ip6tables was completely open and allowed this traffic.
I added this rule manually on my Infomaniak VPS with Cloudron:
sudo ip6tables -I INPUT -p udp --sport 547 --dport 546 -j ACCEPT
Boom. Everything worked. DHCPv6 leases were renewed, no more dropped IPv6, and my PTR6 issue was gone. It’s now been 72 hours and everything remains stable.
Hetzner users don’t encounter this because they’re given static IPv6 addresses, meaning no DHCPv6 exchange is needed. But any provider (like Infomaniak) that uses dynamic IPv6 with DHCPv6 will hit this issue.
The fix
To gain proper DHCPv6 support in Cloudron, add this rule:
ip6tables -I INPUT -p udp --sport 547 --dport 546 -j ACCEPT
But ideally, this rule should be added in
cloudron-firewall.sh
(I guess it's here ? And if not only there, then integrated into the firewall setup logic for Cloudron installations.)
Final thoughts
This was not a systemd bug nor an Infomaniak issue. This was a firewall missing configuration on Cloudron’s part — and it only becomes visible in DHCPv6 environments.
@Girish @Nebulon @joseph , could you please consider updating the Cloudron firewall to include this rule?
Now that Infomaniak works flawlessly with Cloudron (IPv6 included), perhaps you could also consider integrating them into Cloudron as a DNS provider using their API?
Feature request: Add DNS provider Infomaniak => Please people reading this thread, upvote this feature request to have a new provider
Thanks for reading — I hope this helps others avoid the days of debugging I went through!
Cheers!
Gengar
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@Gengar Chapeau!
@BrutalBirdie Merci