@Gertjan said in I am unable to get IPv6 address on LAN.:
Right away : a cell company for me is : those 3G/4G/5G 50++ feet high iron antennas everywhere, who allow my cell phone to do calls, and receive messages, and it also carries a data connection which allows my phone to connect to the internet.
Right ?
All these portable devices were never meant to be 'portable routers firewall devices', but IPv4 was used so .... using some NAT tricks etc and a 4G/5G IPv4 router is easily created. There was a market for them, as not everybody had cable/POTS (to carry A/VDSL) nearby. For the cell company point of view, it's just a 'cell device' that actually is a router, so it 'hides' all other devices on its LAN.
Starting with 4G, the cell network was being used to provide connections to office networks, usually for fallback. Now with 5G, that's being promoted much more and also as the only connection. 5G goes far beyond just providing phone calls. One thing it supports is network slicing where the cell network supports multiple virtual networks, sort of like VLANs for the cell network. These slices can be customized to support different services. For example, there could be one for emergency responders that has higher priority than regular cell users. There could be a low bandwidth slice for utility meters and so on.
With my cell phone, I get a /64 prefix and tethered devices get an IPv6 address, but pfSense can't provide IPv6 address to LAN devices.