User Manual

C
HAPTER
48
| IP Interface Commands
IPv6 Interface
– 1411
ipv6 address eui-64 This command configures an IPv6 address for an interface using an EUI-64
interface ID in the low order 64 bits and enables IPv6 on the interface. Use
the no form without any arguments to remove all manually configured
IPv6 addresses from the interface. Use the no form with a specific address
to remove it from the interface.
SYNTAX
ipv6 address ipv6-prefix/prefix-length eui-64
no ipv6 address [ipv6-prefix/prefix-length eui-64]
ipv6-prefix - The IPv6 network portion of the address assigned to
the interface.
prefix-length - A decimal value indicating how many contiguous bits
(from the left) of the address comprise the prefix (i.e., the network
portion of the address).
DEFAULT SETTING
No IPv6 addresses are defined
COMMAND MODE
Interface Configuration (VLAN, IPv6/v4 Tunnel)
COMMAND USAGE
The prefix must be formatted according to RFC 2373 “IPv6 Addressing
Architecture,” using 8 colon-separated 16-bit hexadecimal values. One
double colon may be used in the address to indicate the appropriate
number of zeros required to fill the undefined fields.
If a link local address has not yet been assigned to this interface, this
command will dynamically generate a global unicast address and a link-
local address for this interface. (The link-local address is made with an
address prefix of FE80 and a host portion based the switch’s MAC
address in modified EUI-64 format.)
Note that the value specified in the ipv6-prefix may include some of the
high-order host bits if the specified prefix length is less than 64 bits. If
the specified prefix length exceeds 64 bits, then the network portion of
the address will take precedence over the interface identifier.
If a duplicate address is detected, a warning message is sent to the
console.
IPv6 addresses are 16 bytes long, of which the bottom 8 bytes typically
form a unique host identifier based on the device’s MAC address. The
EUI-64 specification is designed for devices that use an extended
8-byte MAC address. For devices that still use a 6-byte MAC address
(also known as EUI-48 format), it must be converted into EUI-64
format by inverting the universal/local bit in the address and inserting
the hexadecimal number FFFE between the upper and lower three
bytes of the MAC address.