Administrator Guide

For a Gigabit Ethernet interface, enter the keyword GigabitEthernet then the slot/ port
information.
For a 10-Gigabit Ethernet interface, enter the keyword TenGigabitEthernet then the slot/port
information.
For a Loopback interface, enter the keyword loopback then the loopback number.
For a port-channel interface, enter the keywords port-channel then the port-channel number.
For a VLAN interface, enter the keyword vlan then the VLAN ID.
For a Null interface, enter the keyword null then the Null interface number.
Configuring Telnet with IPv6
Dell Networking OS supports IPv6 telnet.
The Telnet client and server in the Dell Networking OS supports IPv6 connections. You can establish a Telnet
session directly to the router using an IPv6 Telnet client, or you can initiate an IPv6 Telnet connection from
the router.
NOTE
: Dell Networking OS supports Telnet to link local addresses.
Enter the IPv6 Address for the device.
EXEC mode or EXEC Privileged mode
telnet ipv6 address
ipv6 address: x:x:x:x::x
mask: prefix length is from 0 to 128.
NOTE: IPv6 addresses are normally written as eight groups of four hexadecimal digits, where each
group is separated by a colon (:). Omitting zeros is accepted as described in Addressing.
SNMP over IPv6
Dell Networking OS supports the simple network management protocol (SNMP).
You can configure SNMP over IPv6 transport so that an IPv6 host can perform SNMP queries and receive
SNMP notifications from a device running IPv6. The Dell Networking OS SNMP-server commands for IPv6
have been extended to support IPv6. For more information regarding SNMP commands, refer to the SNMP
and SYSLOG chapters in the Dell Networking OS Command Line Interface Reference Guide.
snmp-server host
snmp-server user ipv6
snmp-server community ipv6
snmp-server community access-list-name ipv6
snmp-server group ipv6
snmp-server group access-list-name ipv6
IPv6 Routing 483