Tunnel Configuration Examples
ExtremeWare XOS 11.3 Concepts Guide
527
6to4 Tunnel Configuration Example
Figure 65
illustrates a 6to4 tunnel configured between two IPv6 regions across an IPv4 region.
Figure 65: 6to4 Tunnel Configuration Example
In
Figure 65
, Router 1 has an interface to an IPv4 region with the address 192.168.1.1 (for this example
we are using private IPv4 addresses, but to tunnel across the Internet, you would use a public address).
Router 2 has an IPv4 interface of 10.0.0.1. The IPv4 interface must be created before the tunnel is
configured and cannot be deleted until the tunnel is deleted.
The IPv6 endpoints of 6to4 tunnels must follow the standard 6to4 address requirement. The address
must be of the form 2002:<IPv4_source_endpoint>::/16, where <IPv4_source_endpoint> is replaced by
the IPv4 source address of the endpoint, in hexadecimal, colon separated form. For example, for a
tunnel endpoint located at IPv4 address 10.20.30.40, the tunnel address would be 2002:0a14:1e28::/16. In
hex, 10 is 0a, 20 is 14, 30 is 1e and 40 is 28.
This example shows a simple setup on the Router 1 side (one big /48 IPv6 routing domain with no
subnets), and a slightly more complex setup on the Router 2 side (two subnets :0001: and :0002: that are
/64 in length). Hosts 1, 2, and 3 will communicate using their global 2002: addresses.
The hosts in this example configure themselves using the EUI64 interface identifier derived from their
MAC addresses. Refer to your host OS vendor’s documentation for configuring IPv6 addresses and
routes.
IPv6
IPv4
EX_109
Router 2
Router 1
2002:c0a8:101::1/16
192.168.1.1/24
IPv6
Host 1
2
1
2002:c0a8:101::2/48
2002:a00:1::1/16
10.0.0.1/24
2002:a00:1:1::1/64
2002:a00:1:2::1/64
2002:c0a8:101::204:96ff:fe1f:a52a/48
2002:a00:1:2:201:30ff:fe00:c200/64
2002:a00:1:1:204:96ff:fe1f:a432/64
Host 3
Host 2
2
3
1
Summary of Contents for ExtremeWare XOS 11.3
Page 20: ...Contents ExtremeWare XOS 11 3 Concepts Guide 20...
Page 25: ...1 Using ExtremeWare XOS...
Page 26: ......
Page 38: ...ExtremeWare XOS Overview ExtremeWare XOS 11 3 Concepts Guide 38...
Page 58: ...Accessing the Switch ExtremeWare XOS 11 3 Concepts Guide 58...
Page 146: ...Configuring Slots and Ports on a Switch ExtremeWare XOS 11 3 Concepts Guide 146...
Page 218: ...Status Monitoring and Statistics ExtremeWare XOS 11 3 Concepts Guide 218...
Page 240: ...Virtual LANs ExtremeWare XOS 11 3 Concepts Guide 240...
Page 248: ...Virtual Routers ExtremeWare XOS 11 3 Concepts Guide 248...
Page 278: ...Access Lists ACLs ExtremeWare XOS 11 3 Concepts Guide 278...
Page 288: ...Routing Policies ExtremeWare XOS 11 3 Concepts Guide 288 entry deny_rest if then deny...
Page 344: ...Security ExtremeWare XOS 11 3 Concepts Guide 344...
Page 393: ...2 Using Switching and Routing Protocols...
Page 394: ......
Page 454: ...Spanning Tree Protocol ExtremeWare XOS 11 3 Concepts Guide 454...
Page 484: ...Extreme Standby Router Protocol ExtremeWare XOS 11 3 Concepts Guide 484...
Page 514: ...IPv4 Unicast Routing ExtremeWare XOS 11 3 Concepts Guide 514...
Page 530: ...IPv6 Unicast Routing ExtremeWare XOS 11 3 Concepts Guide 530...
Page 538: ...RIP ExtremeWare XOS 11 3 Concepts Guide 538...
Page 556: ...OSPF ExtremeWare XOS 11 3 Concepts Guide 556...
Page 566: ...OSPFv3 ExtremeWare XOS 11 3 Concepts Guide 566...
Page 589: ...3 Appendixes...
Page 590: ......
Page 640: ...CNA Agent ExtremeWare XOS 11 3 Concepts Guide 640...
Page 670: ...Glossary ExtremeWare XOS 11 3 Concepts Guide 670...
Page 698: ...Index ExtremeWare XOS 11 3 Concepts Guide 698...