Configuring An Ipv4 Over Ipv6 Manual Tunnel - H3C MSR 2600 Configuration Manual

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[RouterB-Ethernet1/1] quit
# Specify an IPv4 address for Serial 2/1, which is the physical interface of the tunnel.
[RouterB] interface serial 2/1
[RouterB-Serial2/1] ip address 3.1.1.1 255.255.255.0
[RouterB-Serial2/1] quit
# Create an IPv4 over IPv4 tunnel interface tunnel 2.
[RouterB] interface tunnel 2 mode ipv4-ipv4
# Specify an IPv4 address for the tunnel interface.
[RouterB-Tunnel2] ip address 10.1.2.2 255.255.255.0
# Specify the IP address of Serial 2/1 as the source address for the tunnel interface.
[RouterB-Tunnel2] source 3.1.1.1
# Specify the IP address of Serial 2/0 on Router A as a destination address for the tunnel interface.
[RouterB-Tunnel2] destination 2.1.1.1
[RouterB-Tunnel2] quit
# Configure a static route destined for the IP network Group 1 through the tunnel interface.
[RouterB] ip route-static 10.1.1.0 255.255.255.0 tunnel 2
Verifying the configuration
# Use the display interface tunnel command to display the status of the tunnel interfaces on Router A and
Router B. The output shows that the tunnel interfaces are up. (Details not shown.)
# Ping the IPv4 address of the peer interface Ethernet 1/1 from each router. The following shows the
output on Router A.
[RouterA] ping -a 10.1.1.1 10.1.3.1
Ping 10.1.3.1 (10.1.3.1) from 10.1.1.1: 56 data bytes, press escape sequence to break
56 bytes from 10.1.3.1: icmp_seq=0 ttl=255 time=2.000 ms
56 bytes from 10.1.3.1: icmp_seq=1 ttl=255 time=1.000 ms
56 bytes from 10.1.3.1: icmp_seq=2 ttl=255 time=0.000 ms
56 bytes from 10.1.3.1: icmp_seq=3 ttl=255 time=1.000 ms
56 bytes from 10.1.3.1: icmp_seq=4 ttl=255 time=1.000 ms
--- Ping statistics for 10.1.3.1 ---
5 packet(s) transmitted, 5 packet(s) received, 0.0% packet loss
round-trip min/avg/max/stddev = 0.000/1.000/2.000/0.632 ms

Configuring an IPv4 over IPv6 manual tunnel

Follow these guidelines when you configure an IPv4 over IPv6 manual tunnel:
The destination address specified for the local tunnel interface must be the source address specified
for the peer tunnel interface, and vice versa.
The source/destination addresses of local tunnels of the same tunnel mode cannot be the same.
If the destination IPv4 network is not on the same subnet as the IPv4 address of the local tunnel
interface, you must configure a route destined for the destination IPv4 network through the tunnel
interface. You can configure a static route, and specify the local tunnel interface as the egress
interface or specify the IPv6 address of the peer tunnel interface as the next hop. Alternatively, you
can enable a dynamic routing protocol on both tunnel interfaces to achieve the same purpose. For
the detailed configuration, see Layer 3—IP Routing Configuration Guide.
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