Netgear GSM7224v2 - 24-Port Layer 2 Managed Gigabit Switch Benutzerhandbuch

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Chapter 4.  Routing 
 
ProSafe® Gigabit L3 Managed Stackable Switches Software Administration Manual 
The source IP address is compared to the destination IP address of the route. The source IP 
netmask in the access list rule is treated as a wildcard mask, indicating which bits in the 
source IP address must match the destination address of the route. (Note that a 1 in the 
mask indicates a “don't care” in the corresponding address bit.)
When an access list rule includes a destination IP address and netmask (an extended access 
list), the destination IP address is compared to the network mask of the destination of the 
route. The destination netmask in the access list serves as a wildcard mask, indicating which 
bits in the route's destination mask are significant for the filtering operation. 
OSPFv3
OSPFv3 is the Open Shortest Path First routing protocol for IPv6. It is similar to OSPFv2 in its 
concept of a link state database, intra/inter area, and AS external routes and virtual links. It 
differs from its IPv4 counterpoint in a number of respects, including the following: peering is 
done via link-local addresses; the protocol is link-based rather than network-based; and 
addressing semantics have been moved to leaf LSAs, which eventually allow its use for both 
IPv4 and IPv6. Point-to-point links are also supported in order to enable operation over 
tunnels.
It is possible to enable OSPF and OSPFv3 at the same time. OSPF works with IPv4 and 
OSPFv3 works with IPv6.
From the OSPF link, you can access the following pages:
Basic
From the Basic link, you can access the following pages: