Configuring An Ipv6 Over Ipv6 Tunnel; Configuration Prerequisites; Configuration Guidelines - HP 10500 Series Configuration Manual

Layer 3 - ip services
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Encapsulation is TUNNEL, service-loopback-group ID is 1.
Tunnel source 2002::0002:0001, destination 2002::0001:0001
Tunnel bandwidth 64 (kbps)
Tunnel protocol/transport IP/IPv6
last clearing of counters:
Last 300 seconds input:
Last 300 seconds output:
167 packets input,
0 input error
170 packets output,
0 output error
# Ping the IPv4 address of the peer interface VLAN-interface 100 from Switch A.
[RouterA] ping 30.1.3.1
PING 30.1.3.1: 56
Reply from 30.1.3.1: bytes=56 Sequence=1 ttl=255 time=46 ms
Reply from 30.1.3.1: bytes=56 Sequence=2 ttl=255 time=15 ms
Reply from 30.1.3.1: bytes=56 Sequence=3 ttl=255 time=16 ms
Reply from 30.1.3.1: bytes=56 Sequence=4 ttl=255 time=15 ms
Reply from 30.1.3.1: bytes=56 Sequence=5 ttl=255 time=16 ms
--- 30.1.3.1 ping statistics ---
5 packet(s) transmitted
5 packet(s) received
0.00% packet loss
round-trip min/avg/max = 15/21/46 ms

Configuring an IPv6 over IPv6 tunnel

Configuration prerequisites

Configure an IPv6 address for the interface (such as a VLAN interface or loopback interface) to be
configured as the source interface of the tunnel interface.

Configuration guidelines

Follow these guidelines when you configure an IPv6 over IPv6 tunnel:
Specify public addresses or interfaces as the source and destination addresses for the tunnel
interfaces.
If the two tunnel interfaces at the tunnel ends reside on different subnets, you must configure a static
route or dynamic routing at each tunnel end so that they can reach other over the tunnel.
If the destination IPv6 network is not on the same subnet as the IPv6 address of the local tunnel
interface, you must configure a route destined for the destination IPv6 network through the tunnel
interface. You can configure a static route, and specify the local tunnel interface as the output
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.
Never
1 bytes/sec, 0 packets/sec
1 bytes/sec, 0 packets/sec
10688 bytes
10880 bytes
data bytes, press CTRL_C to break
182

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