Viewing Ipv6 Route Tables - Cisco SF500-24 Administration Manual

500 series stackable managed switch
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Configuring IP Information
Management and IP Interfaces
STEP 5
STEP 6
STEP 1
STEP 1
Cisco 500 Series Stackable Managed Switch Administration Guide
MAC Address—Enter the MAC address mapped to the specified IPv6
address.
Click Apply. The Running Configuration file is updated.
To change the type of an IP address from Dynamic to Static, use the Edit IPv6
Neighbors page.

Viewing IPv6 Route Tables

IPv6 Routes
The
page displays the
default route (IPv6 address:0) that uses the default router selected from the IPv6
Default Router List to send packets to destination devices that are not in the same
IPv6 subnet as the switch. In addition to the default route, the table also contains
dynamic routes that are ICMP redirect routes received from IPv6 routers by using
ICMP redirect messages. This could happen when the default router the switch
uses is not the router for traffic to which the IPv6 subnets that the switch wants to
communicate.
To view IPv6 routing entries in Layer 2 mode:
Click Administration > Management Interface > IPv6 Routes.
-or
To view IPv6 routing entries in Layer 3 mode:
Click IP Configuration > Management and IP Interface > IPv6 Routes.
IPv6 Routes
The
page opens.
This page displays the following fields:
IPv6 Address—The IPv6 subnet address.
Prefix Length—IP route prefix length for the destination IPv6 subnet
address. It is preceded by a forward slash.
Interface—Interface used to forward the packet.
Next Hop—Address where the packet is forwarded. Typically, this is the
address of a neighboring router. This must be a link local address.
Metric—Value used for comparing this route to other routes with the same
destination in the IPv6 router table. All default routes have the same value.
IPv6 Routing Table
. The table contains a single
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