VMG1312-B10A User’s Guide
353
A
P P E N D I X
E
IPv6
Overview
IPv6 (Internet Protocol version 6), is designed to enhance IP address size and features. The
increase in IPv6 address size to 128 bits (from the 32-bit IPv4 address) allows up to 3.4 x 10
38
IP
addresses.
IPv6 Addressing
The 128-bit IPv6 address is written as eight 16-bit hexadecimal blocks separated by colons (:). This
is an example IPv6 address
2001:0db8:1a2b:0015:0000:0000:1a2f:0000
.
IPv6 addresses can be abbreviated in two ways:
• Leading zeros in a block can be omitted. So
2001:0db8:1a2b:0015:0000:0000:1a2f:0000
can
be written as
2001:db8:1a2b:15:0:0:1a2f:0
.
• Any number of consecutive blocks of zeros can be replaced by a double colon. A double colon can
only appear once in an IPv6 address. So
2001:0db8:0000:0000:1a2f:0000:0000:0015
can be
written as
2001:0db8::1a2f:0000:0000:0015
,
2001:0db8:0000:0000:1a2f::0015
,
2001:db8::1a2f:0:0:15
or
2001:db8:0:0:1a2f::15
.
Prefix and Prefix Length
Similar to an IPv4 subnet mask, IPv6 uses an address prefix to represent the network address. An
IPv6 prefix length specifies how many most significant bits (start from the left) in the address
compose the network address. The prefix length is written as “/x” where x is a number. For
example,
2001:db8:1a2b:15::1a2f:0/32
means that the first 32 bits (
2001:db8
) is the subnet prefix.
Link-local Address
A link-local address uniquely identifies a device on the local network (the LAN). It is similar to a
“private IP address” in IPv4. You can have the same link-local address on multiple interfaces on a
device. A link-local unicast address has a predefined prefix of fe80::/10. The link-local unicast
address format is as follows.
Table 126
Link-local Unicast Address Format
1111 1110 10
0
Interface ID
10 bits
54 bits
64 bits
Summary of Contents for VWG1312-B10A
Page 2: ......
Page 8: ...Contents Overview VMG1312 B10A User s Guide 8 Troubleshooting 291 ...
Page 18: ...Table of Contents VMG1312 B10A User s Guide 18 ...
Page 19: ...19 PART I User s Guide ...
Page 20: ...20 ...
Page 34: ...Chapter 2 The Web Configurator VMG1312 B10A User s Guide 34 ...
Page 39: ...Chapter 4 Tutorials VMG1312 B10A User s Guide 39 7 Click Apply to save your settings ...
Page 79: ...79 PART II Technical Reference ...
Page 80: ...80 ...
Page 168: ...Chapter 9 Routing VMG1312 B10A User s Guide 168 ...
Page 186: ...Chapter 10 Quality of Service QoS VMG1312 B10A User s Guide 186 ...
Page 212: ...Chapter 13 Interface Group VMG1312 B10A User s Guide 212 ...
Page 228: ...Chapter 15 Firewall VMG1312 B10A User s Guide 228 ...
Page 234: ...Chapter 17 Parental Control VMG1312 B10A User s Guide 234 ...
Page 244: ...Chapter 19 Certificates VMG1312 B10A User s Guide 244 ...
Page 248: ...Chapter 20 Log VMG1312 B10A User s Guide 248 ...
Page 252: ...Chapter 21 Traffic Status VMG1312 B10A User s Guide 252 ...
Page 258: ...Chapter 24 IGMP Status VMG1312 B10A User s Guide 258 ...
Page 262: ...Chapter 25 xDSL Statistics VMG1312 B10A User s Guide 262 ...
Page 264: ...Chapter 26 User Account VMG1312 B10A User s Guide 264 ...
Page 270: ...Chapter 29 TR 064 VMG1312 B10A User s Guide 270 ...
Page 274: ...Chapter 30 Time Settings VMG1312 B10A User s Guide 274 ...
Page 280: ...Chapter 32 Logs Setting VMG1312 B10A User s Guide 280 ...
Page 298: ...Chapter 36 Troubleshooting VMG1312 B10A User s Guide 298 ...
Page 338: ...Appendix C Pop up Windows JavaScripts and Java Permissions VMG1312 B10A User s Guide 338 ...
Page 352: ...Appendix D Wireless LANs VMG1312 B10A User s Guide 352 ...
Page 368: ...Appendix G Legal Information VMG1312 B10A User s Guide 368 ...
Page 376: ...VMG1312 B10A User s Guide 376 Index ...