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BigIron RX Series Configuration Guide
1081
53-1002253-01
IPv6 addressing
42
.
A switch automatically configures a link-local unicast address for an interface by using the prefix of
FE80::/10 (1111 1110 10) and a 64-bit interface ID. The 128-bit IPv6 address is then subjected to
duplicate address detection to ensure that the address is unique on the link. If desired, you can
override this automatically configured address by explicitly configuring an address.
TABLE 173
IPv6 address types
Address
type
Description
Address structure
Unicast
An address for a single
interface. A packet sent to a
unicast address is delivered to
the interface identified by the
address.
Depends on the type of the unicast address:
•
Aggregatable global address—An address equivalent to a global
or public IPv4 address. The address structure is as follows: a
fixed prefix of 2000::/3 (001), a 45-bit global routing prefix, a
16-bit subnet ID, and a 64-bit interface ID.
•
Site-local address—An address used within a site or intranet.
(This address is similar to a private IPv4 address.) A site
consists of multiple network links. The address structure is as
follows: a fixed prefix of FEC0::/10 (1111 1110 11), a 16-bit
subnet ID, and a 64-bit interface ID.
•
Link-local address—An address used between directly
connected nodes on a single network link. The address
structure is as follows: a fixed prefix of FE80::/10 (1111 1110
10) and a 64-bit interface ID.
•
IPv4-compatible address—An address used in IPv6 transition
mechanisms that tunnel IPv6 packets dynamically over IPv4
infrastructures. The address embeds an IPv4 address in the
low-order 32 bits and the high-order 96 bits are zeros. The
address structure is as follows: 0:0:0:0:0:0:A.B.C.D.
•
Loopback address—An address (0:0:0:0:0:0:0:1 or ::1) that a
switch can use to send an IPv6 packet to itself. You cannot
assign a loopback address to a physical interface.
•
Unspecified address—An address (0:0:0:0:0:0:0:0 or ::) that a
node can use until you configure an IPv6 address for it.
Multicast
An address for a set of
interfaces belonging to
different nodes. Sending a
packet to a multicast address
results in the delivery of the
packet to all interfaces in the
set.
A multicast address has a fixed prefix of FF00::/8 (1111 1111). The
next 4 bits define the address as a permanent or temporary
address. The next 4 bits define the scope of the address (node, link,
site, organization, global).
Anycast
An address for a set of
interfaces belonging to
different nodes. Sending a
packet to an anycast address
results in the delivery of the
packet to the closest interface
identified by the address.
An anycast address looks similar to a unicast address, because it is
allocated from the unicast address space. If you assign a unicast
address to multiple interfaces, it is an anycast address. An interface
assigned an anycast address must be configured to recognize the
address as an anycast address.
An anycast address can be assigned to a switch only.
An anycast address must not be used as the source address of an
IPv6 packet.
Summary of Contents for BigIron RX Series
Page 228: ...152 BigIron RX Series Configuration Guide 53 1002253 01 Enabling WAN PHY mode support 6 ...
Page 312: ...236 BigIron RX Series Configuration Guide 53 1002253 01 Displaying IP information 7 ...
Page 356: ...280 BigIron RX Series Configuration Guide 53 1002253 01 Resetting LLDP statistics 9 ...
Page 402: ...326 BigIron RX Series Configuration Guide 53 1002253 01 Transparent firewall mode 11 ...
Page 432: ...356 BigIron RX Series Configuration Guide 53 1002253 01 SuperSpan 12 ...
Page 500: ...424 BigIron RX Series Configuration Guide 53 1002253 01 MRP CLI example 14 ...
Page 591: ...BigIron RX Series Configuration Guide 515 53 1002253 01 Displaying traffic reduction 19 ...
Page 592: ...516 BigIron RX Series Configuration Guide 53 1002253 01 Displaying traffic reduction 19 ...
Page 598: ...522 BigIron RX Series Configuration Guide 53 1002253 01 Viewing Layer 2 ACLs 20 ...
Page 656: ...580 BigIron RX Series Configuration Guide 53 1002253 01 Trunk formation 22 ...
Page 754: ...678 BigIron RX Series Configuration Guide 53 1002253 01 Displaying RIP filters 24 ...
Page 814: ...738 BigIron RX Series Configuration Guide 53 1002253 01 Displaying OSPF information 25 ...
Page 980: ...904 BigIron RX Series Configuration Guide 53 1002253 01 Clearing IS IS information 28 ...
Page 1000: ...924 BigIron RX Series Configuration Guide 53 1002253 01 Using secure copy 30 ...
Page 1088: ...1012 BigIron RX Series Configuration Guide 53 1002253 01 IP source guard 35 ...
Page 1108: ...1032 BigIron RX Series Configuration Guide 53 1002253 01 Reading CDP packets 37 ...
Page 1126: ...1050 BigIron RX Series Configuration Guide 53 1002253 01 Clearing sFlow statistics 39 ...
Page 1324: ...1248 BigIron RX Series Configuration Guide 53 1002253 01 Displaying OSPFv3 information 48 ...
Page 1363: ...BigIron RX Series Configuration Guide 1287 53 1002253 01 Continuous System Monitor 51 ...
Page 1364: ...1288 BigIron RX Series Configuration Guide 53 1002253 01 Continuous System Monitor 51 ...
Page 1404: ...1328 BigIron RX Series Configuration Guide 53 1002253 01 Commands That Require a Reload D ...
Page 1458: ...1382 BigIron RX Series Configuration Guide 53 1002253 01 VSRP E ...