IP Interface Commands
41-16
41
This example displays a brief summary of IPv6 addresses configured on the router.
Related Commands
show ip interface (41-5)
Joined group
address(es)
In addition to the unicast addresses assigned to an interface, a node is required
to join the all-nodes multicast addresses FF01::1 and FF02::1 for all IPv6 nodes
within scope 1 (interface-local) and scope 2 (link-local), respectively.
FF01::1/16 is the transient node-local multicast address for all attached IPv6
nodes, and FF02::1/16 is the link-local multicast address for all attached IPv6
nodes. The node-local multicast address is only used for loopback transmission
of multicast traffic. Link-local multicast addresses cover the same types as used
by link-local unicast addresses, including all nodes (FF02::1), all routers
(FF02::2), and solicited nodes (FF02::1:FFXX:XXXX) as described below.
A node is also required to compute and join the associated solicited-node
multicast addresses for every unicast and anycast address it is assigned. IPv6
addresses that differ only in the high-order bits, e.g. due to multiple high-order
prefixes associated with different aggregations, will map to the same
solicited-node address, thereby reducing the number of multicast addresses a
node must join. In this example, FF02::1:FF90:0/104 is the solicited-node
multicast address which is formed by taking the low-order 24 bits of the address
and appending those bits to the prefix.
MTU
Maximum transmission unit for this interface.
ND DAD
Indicates whether (neighbor discovery) duplicate address detection is enabled.
number of DAD attempts The number of consecutive neighbor solicitation messages sent on the interface
during duplicate address detection.
Console#show ipv6 interface brief
Vlan 1 is up
IPv6 is enable.
FF01::1
2009:DB9:2229::79
FE80::269:3EF9:FE19:6779
FF02::1
FF02::1:FF00:79
FF02::1:FF19:6779
Console#
Table 41-3 show ipv6 interface - display description
(Continued)
Field
Description
Summary of Contents for 8926EM
Page 6: ...ii ...
Page 34: ...Getting Started ...
Page 44: ...Introduction 1 10 1 ...
Page 62: ...Initial Configuration 2 18 2 ...
Page 64: ...Switch Management ...
Page 76: ...Configuring the Switch 3 12 3 ...
Page 118: ...Basic Management Tasks 4 42 4 ...
Page 164: ...User Authentication 6 28 6 ...
Page 176: ...Access Control Lists 7 12 7 ...
Page 284: ...Quality of Service 14 8 14 ...
Page 294: ...Multicast Filtering 15 10 15 ...
Page 300: ...Domain Name Service 16 6 16 ...
Page 310: ...Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol 17 10 17 ...
Page 320: ...Configuring Router Redundancy 18 10 18 ...
Page 344: ...IP Routing 19 24 19 ...
Page 356: ...Unicast Routing 20 12 20 Web Click Routing Protocol RIP Statistics Figure 20 5 RIP Statistics ...
Page 386: ...Unicast Routing 20 42 20 ...
Page 388: ...Command Line Interface ...
Page 400: ...Overview of the Command Line Interface 21 12 21 ...
Page 466: ...SNMP Commands 24 16 24 ...
Page 520: ...Access Control List Commands 26 18 26 ...
Page 546: ...Rate Limit Commands 30 2 30 ...
Page 612: ...VLAN Commands 34 24 34 ...
Page 626: ...Class of Service Commands 35 14 35 ...
Page 670: ...DHCP Commands 39 16 39 ...
Page 716: ...IP Interface Commands 41 36 41 ...
Page 768: ...IP Routing Commands 42 52 42 ...
Page 770: ...Appendices ...
Page 791: ......