Ipv6 Routing; Protocol Overview; Extended Address Space; Stateless Autoconfiguration - Dell Force10 Z9000 Configuration Manual

Hide thumbs Also See for Force10 Z9000:
Table of Contents

Advertisement

IPv6 Routing

Internet protocol version 6 (IPv6) routing is supported on Dell Networking OS.
NOTE: The IPv6 basic commands are supported on all platforms. However, not all features are supported on all platforms,
nor for all releases. To determine the Dell Networking Operating System (OS) version supporting which features and
platforms, refer to
Implementing IPv6 with Dell Networking
IPv6 is the successor to IPv4. Due to the rapid growth in internet users and IP addresses, IPv4 is reaching its maximum usage. IPv6
will eventually replace IPv4 usage to allow for the constant expansion.
This chapter provides a brief description of the differences between IPv4 and IPv6, and the Dell Networking support of IPv6. This
chapter is not intended to be a comprehensive description of IPv6.

Protocol Overview

IPv6 is an evolution of IPv4. IPv6 is generally installed as an upgrade in devices and operating systems. Most new devices and
operating systems support both IPv4 and IPv6.
Some key changes in IPv6 are:

Extended address space

Stateless autoconfiguration

Header format simplification
Improved support for options and extensions
Extended Address Space
The address format is extended from 32 bits to 128 bits. This not only provides room for all anticipated needs, it allows for the use of
a hierarchical address space structure to optimize global addressing.
Stateless Autoconfiguration
When a booting device comes up in IPv6 and asks for its network prefix, the device can get the prefix (or prefixes) from an IPv6
router on its link. It can then autoconfigure one or more global IPv6 addresses by using either the MAC address or a private random
number to build its unique IPv6 address.
Stateless autoconfiguration uses three mechanisms for IPv6 address configuration:
Prefix Advertisement — Routers use "Router Advertisement" messages to announce the network prefix. Hosts then use their
interface-identifier MAC address to generate their own valid IPv6 address.
Duplicate Address Detection (DAD) — Before configuring its IPv6 address, an IPv6 host node device checks whether that
address is used anywhere on the network using this mechanism.
Prefix Renumbering — Useful in transparent renumbering of hosts in the network when an organization changes its service
provider.
NOTE: As an alternative to stateless autoconfiguration, network hosts can obtain their IPv6 addresses using the dynamic
host control protocol (DHCP) servers via stateful auto-configuration.
NOTE: Dell Networking OS provides the flexibility to add prefixes on Router Advertisements (RA) to advertise responses
to Router Solicitations (RS). By default, RA response messages are sent when an RS message is received.
OS.
21
333
IPv6 Routing

Advertisement

Table of Contents
loading

Table of Contents