It is a kernel config - IPV6_PRIVACY - and it is set to "y" in KK so
you would have to recompile your kernel in order to set it to "n" or
"m".
The corresponding proc entry is
/proc/sys/net/ipv6/conf/lo/use_tempaddr
and when I "sysctl" or "cat" mine, it returns "-1". (And it is 0 for wlan0.)
You could sysctl yours to "-1" if it isn't and it might stop the
"Privacy" messages. (And if it isn't set to "-1" for KK server
edition, you might want to file a bug report.)
The values that use_tempaddr can take are
<= 0 disable Privacy Extensions
== 1 enable Privacy Extensions, but prefer public addresses over
temporary addresses
> 1 enable Privacy Extensions and prefer temporary addresses over public addresses
Default 0 (for most devices)
Default -1 (for point-to-point devices and loopback devices)
Tom-H4 writes for ubuntu-users mailing list old.nabble. com/lo: -Disabled- Privacy- Extensions- td26630008. html
http://
---------- snip ---------
It is a kernel config - IPV6_PRIVACY - and it is set to "y" in KK so
you would have to recompile your kernel in order to set it to "n" or
"m".
The corresponding proc entry is net/ipv6/ conf/lo/ use_tempaddr
/proc/sys/
and when I "sysctl" or "cat" mine, it returns "-1". (And it is 0 for wlan0.)
You could sysctl yours to "-1" if it isn't and it might stop the
"Privacy" messages. (And if it isn't set to "-1" for KK server
edition, you might want to file a bug report.)
The values that use_tempaddr can take are
<= 0 disable Privacy Extensions
== 1 enable Privacy Extensions, but prefer public addresses over
temporary addresses
> 1 enable Privacy Extensions and prefer temporary addresses over public addresses
Default 0 (for most devices)
Default -1 (for point-to-point devices and loopback devices)