GarrettCom MNS-6K Manual Do Utilizador

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IPv6 Addressing 
IPv6 addresses are 128-bits long and are identifiers for individual interfaces and sets of 
interfaces. IPv6 addresses of all types are assigned to interfaces, not nodes. Since each 
interface belongs to a single node, any of that node's interfaces' unicast addresses may be 
used as an identifier for the node. A single interface may be assigned multiple IPv6 
addresses of any type.  
There are three types of IPv6 addresses. These are unicast, anycast, and multicast. Unicast 
addresses identify a single interface. Anycast addresses identify a set of interfaces such that 
a packet sent to an anycast address will be delivered to one member of the set. Multicast 
addresses identify a group of interfaces, such that a packet sent to a multicast address is 
delivered to all of the interfaces in the group. There are no broadcast addresses in IPv6, 
their function being superseded by multicast addresses.  
IPv6
 supports addresses which are four times the number of bits as IPv4 addresses (128 
vs. 32). This is 4 Billion times 4 Billion times 4 Billion (2
96
) times the size of the IPv4 
address space (2
32
). This works out to be:  
340,282,366,920,938,463,463,374,607,431,768,211,456  
This is an extremely large address space. In a theoretical sense this is approximately 
665,570,793,348,866,943,898,599 addresses per square meter of the surface of the planet 
Earth (assuming the earth surface is 511,263,971,197,990 square meters).  In the most 
pessimistic estimate this would provide 1,564 addresses for each square meter of the 
surface of the planet Earth. The optimistic estimate would allow for 
3,911,873,538,269,506,102 addresses for each square meter of the surface of the planet 
Earth.  Approximately fifteen percent of the address space is initially allocated. The 
remaining 85% is reserved for future use.  
The details on the addressing are covered by numerous articles on the WWW as well as 
other literature and are not covered here. 
Configuring IPv6 
The commands used for IPv6 are the same as those used for IPv4. Some of the 
commands will be discussed in more details later. The only exception is the ‘ping’ 
command where there is a special command for IPv6. That commands is ‘ping6’ and the 
syntax is as 
 
Syntax  ping6 <IPv6 address> - pings an IPv6 station 
 
There is also a special command to ping the status of IPv6. That command is 
 
Syntax  show ipv6  - displays the IPv6 information 
 
To configure IPv6, the following sequence of commands can be used. 
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