What Are Tunnel Interfaces; Why Are Routing Interfaces Needed - Dell PowerEdge M420 Configuration Manual

Dell powerconnect m8024-k user's configuration guide
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services such as Telnet and SSH. In this way, the IP address on a loopback
behaves identically to any of the local addresses of the VLAN routing
interfaces in terms of the processing of incoming packets.

What Are Tunnel Interfaces?

Tunnels are a mechanism for transporting a packet across a network so that it
can be evaluated at a remote location or
effectively, hides the packet from the network used to transport the packet to
the endpoint. This allows for the transmission of packets that the transport
network cannot process directly, such as in one of the following cases:
The packet protocol is not supported.
The packet is in an incompatible addressing space.
The packet is encrypted.
PowerConnect M6220, M6348, M8024, and M8024-k switches support
tunnels to encapsulate IPv6 traffic in IPv4 tunnels to provide functionality to
facilitate the transition of IPv4 networks to IPv6 networks.
The switch supports two types of tunnels: configured (6-in-4) and automatic
(6-to-4). Configured tunnels have an explicit configured endpoint and are
considered to be point-to-point interfaces. Automatic tunnels determine the
endpoint of the tunnel from the destination address of packets routed into
the tunnel. These tunnels correspond to Non-Broadcast Multi-Access
(NBMA) interfaces. A configured tunnel interface has a single tunnel
associated with it, while an automatic tunnel interface has an infinite number
of tunnels (limited only by the address encoding scheme).
Because tunnels are used as logical interfaces, you can define static routes
that reference the tunnels. Additionally, dynamic routing can be configured to
use the tunnels.

Why Are Routing Interfaces Needed?

The routing interfaces this chapter describes have very different applications
and uses, as this section describes. If you use the switch as a layer 2 device
that handles switching only, routing interface configuration is not required.
When the switch is used as a layer 2 device, it typically connects to an
external layer 3 device that handles the routing functions.
tunnel endpoint
Configuring Routing Interfaces
. The tunnel,
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