Miredo : Teredo IPv6 tunneling for Linux and BSD
Miredo is an open-source
Teredo IPv6 tunneling software, for Linux
and the BSD operating systems. It includes functional implementations of all
components of the Teredo specification (client, relay and server).
It is meant to provide IPv6 connectivity even from behind NAT devices.
For more informations, please refer to the introduction.
- 16th February 2008 - git migration
- Miredo source code tree has been migrated from Subversion to git.
You can access the web interface here.
- 8th November 2007 - Miredo 1.1.4
- Fix scripting problems on Fedora.
- 17th October 2007 - Miredo 1.1.3
- Fix for a major hole punching regression in versions 1.1.0-1.1.2,
and improved debug messages.
- 13th September 2007 - Miredo 1.1.2
- Fix miredo-server breakage in versions 1.1.0-1.1.1.
- 2nd September 2007 - Miredo 1.1.1
- Fix padding problem on some architecture (such as old Linux ARM ABI).
- 19th August 2007 - Miredo 1.1.0
- This is a test release with initial symmetric NAT traversal support,
and various other minor enhancements and fixes. Note that it might not
work too well on non-Linux systems - BSD support will be fixed later as
the 1.1.x branch matures.
- 13th August 2007 - 2000th commit
- Miredo source tree reaches 2000 changesets as development continues.
- 8th April 2007 - Miredo hits Debian stable
- Debian Etch has been released today.
Miredo 1.0.4-2 is included in the huge package lists.
This is Miredo version 1.0.4 with the critical and security fixes
from releases 1.0.5 and 1.0.6.
The same package is also in Ubuntu Feisty
(in the universe repository),
so it should be available in a stable Ubuntu release pretty soon.
- 21th February 2007 - Miredo for MacOS X
- Robert Quattlebaum released Miredo for OSX Preview 2,
which is a MacOS X package including Miredo, tuntap-osx, libJudy
and a MacOS X specific configuration UI.
The package also provides universal binaries,
so you can run it on both PPC and Intel Macs.
More infos
on his website.