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Cisco Catalyst Blade Switch 3130 and 3032 for Dell Software Configuration Guide
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Chapter 39 Configuring IPv6 Unicast Routing
Understanding IPv6
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Use the Search field to locate the Cisco IOS software documentation. For example, if you want
information about static routes, you can enter
Implementing Static Routes for IPv6
in the search field
to get this document about static routes:
This section describes IPv6 implementation on the switch. These sections are included:
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Supported IPv6 Unicast Routing Features, page 39-2
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Unsupported IPv6 and Unicast Routing Features, page 39-8
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IPv6 and Switch Stacks, page 39-9
IPv6 Addresses
The switch supports only IPv6 unicast addresses. It does not support site-local unicast addresses, anycast
addresses, or multicast addresses.
The IPv6 128-bit addresses are represented as a series of eight 16-bit hexadecimal fields separated by
colons in the format: n:n:n:n:n:n:n:n. This is an example of an IPv6 address:
2031:0000:130F:0000:0000:09C0:080F:130B
For easier implementation, leading zeros in each field are optional. This is the same address without
leading zeros:
2031:0:130F:0:0:9C0:80F:130B
You can also use two colons (::) to represent successive hexadecimal fields of zeros, but you can use this
short version only once in each address:
2031:0:130F::09C0:080F:130B
For more information about IPv6 address formats, address types, and the IPv6 packet header, see the
“Implementing IPv6 Addressing and Basic Connectivity” chapter of
Cisco IOS IPv6 Configuration
Library
on Cisco.com.
In the “Information About Implementing Basic Connectivity for IPv6” chapter, these sections apply to
the switch:
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IPv6 Address Formats
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IPv6 Address Type: Unicast
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IPv6 Address Output Display
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Simplified IPv6 Packet Header
Supported IPv6 Unicast Routing Features
These sections describe the IPv6 protocol features supported by the switch:
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128-Bit Wide Unicast Addresses, page 39-4
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