
Chapter 30
| IP Interface Commands
IPv6 Interface
– 866 –
ipv6-prefix
- The IPv6 network portion of the address assigned to the
interface.
prefix-length
- A decimal value indicating how many contiguous bits (from
the left) of the address comprise the prefix (i.e., the network portion of the
address).
Default Setting
No IPv6 addresses are defined
Command Mode
Interface Configuration (VLAN)
Command Usage
◆
The prefix must be formatted according to RFC 2373 “IPv6 Addressing
Architecture,” using 8 colon-separated 16-bit hexadecimal values. One double
colon may be used in the address to indicate the appropriate number of zeros
required to fill the undefined fields.
◆
If a link local address has not yet been assigned to this interface, this command
will dynamically generate a global unicast address and a link-local address for
this interface. (The link-local address is made with an address prefix of FE80 and
a host portion based the switch’s MAC address in modified EUI-64 format.)
◆
Note that the value specified in the ipv6-prefix may include some of the high-
order host bits if the specified prefix length is less than 64 bits. If the specified
prefix length exceeds 64 bits, then the network portion of the address will take
precedence over the interface identifier.
◆
If a duplicate address is detected, a warning message is sent to the console.
◆
IPv6 addresses are 16 bytes long, of which the bottom 8 bytes typically form a
unique host identifier based on the device’s MAC address. The EUI-64
specification is designed for devices that use an extended 8-byte MAC address.
For devices that still use a 6-byte MAC address (also known as EUI-48 format), it
must be converted into EUI-64 format by inverting the universal/local bit in the
address and inserting the hexadecimal number FFFE between the upper and
lower three bytes of the MAC address.
◆
For example, if a device had an EUI-48 address of 28-9F-18-1C-82-35, the
global/local bit must first be inverted to meet EUI-64 requirements (i.e., 1 for
globally defined addresses and 0 for locally defined addresses), changing 28 to
2A. Then the two bytes FFFE are inserted between the OUI (i.e., company id)
and the rest of the address, resulting in a modified EUI-64 interface identifier of
2A-9F-18-FF-FE-1C-82-35.
◆
This host addressing method allows the same interface identifier to be used on
multiple IP interfaces of a single device, as long as those interfaces are attached
to different subnets.
Summary of Contents for ECS4120-28F
Page 36: ...Contents 36...
Page 38: ...Figures 38...
Page 46: ...Section I Getting Started 46...
Page 70: ...Chapter 1 Initial Switch Configuration Setting the System Clock 70...
Page 86: ...Chapter 2 Using the Command Line Interface CLI Command Groups 86...
Page 202: ...Chapter 5 SNMP Commands Additional Trap Commands 202...
Page 210: ...Chapter 6 Remote Monitoring Commands 210...
Page 216: ...Chapter 7 Flow Sampling Commands 216...
Page 278: ...Chapter 8 Authentication Commands PPPoE Intermediate Agent 278...
Page 360: ...Chapter 9 General Security Measures Port based Traffic Segmentation 360...
Page 384: ...Chapter 10 Access Control Lists ACL Information 384...
Page 424: ...Chapter 11 Interface Commands Power Savings 424...
Page 446: ...Chapter 13 Power over Ethernet Commands 446...
Page 456: ...Chapter 14 Port Mirroring Commands RSPAN Mirroring Commands 456...
Page 488: ...Chapter 17 UniDirectional Link Detection Commands 488...
Page 494: ...Chapter 18 Address Table Commands 494...
Page 554: ...Chapter 20 ERPS Commands 554...
Page 620: ...Chapter 22 Class of Service Commands Priority Commands Layer 3 and 4 620...
Page 638: ...Chapter 23 Quality of Service Commands 638...
Page 772: ...Chapter 25 LLDP Commands 772...
Page 814: ...Chapter 26 CFM Commands Delay Measure Operations 814...
Page 836: ...Chapter 28 Domain Name Service Commands 836...
Page 848: ...Chapter 29 DHCP Commands DHCP Relay Option 82 848...
Page 902: ...Section III Appendices 902...
Page 916: ...Glossary 916...
Page 926: ...CLI Commands 926...
Page 937: ......
Page 938: ...E092017 CS R02...