Web Management Guide-R03
Table Of Contents
- How to Use This Guide
- Contents
- Figures
- Tables
- Getting Started
- Web Configuration
- Basic Management Tasks
- Displaying System Information
- Displaying Hardware/Software Versions
- Configuring Support for Jumbo Frames
- Displaying Bridge Extension Capabilities
- Managing System Files
- Setting the System Clock
- Configuring the Console Port
- Configuring Telnet Settings
- Displaying CPU Utilization
- Displaying Memory Utilization
- Resetting the System
- Interface Configuration
- VLAN Configuration
- Address Table Settings
- Spanning Tree Algorithm
- Congestion Control
- Class of Service
- Quality of Service
- VoIP Traffic Configuration
- Security Measures
- AAA Authorization and Accounting
- Configuring User Accounts
- Web Authentication
- Network Access (MAC Address Authentication)
- Configuring HTTPS
- Configuring the Secure Shell
- Access Control Lists
- Setting A Time Range
- Showing TCAM Utilization
- Setting the ACL Name and Type
- Configuring a Standard IPv4 ACL
- Configuring an Extended IPv4 ACL
- Configuring a Standard IPv6 ACL
- Configuring an Extended IPv6 ACL
- Configuring a MAC ACL
- Configuring an ARP ACL
- Binding a Port to an Access Control List
- Configuring ACL Mirroring
- Showing ACL Hardware Counters
- ARP Inspection
- Filtering IP Addresses for Management Access
- Configuring Port Security
- Configuring 802.1X Port Authentication
- DoS Protection
- IP Source Guard
- DHCP Snooping
- Basic Administration Protocols
- Configuring Event Logging
- Link Layer Discovery Protocol
- Power over Ethernet
- Simple Network Management Protocol
- Configuring Global Settings for SNMP
- Setting the Local Engine ID
- Specifying a Remote Engine ID
- Setting SNMPv3 Views
- Configuring SNMPv3 Groups
- Setting Community Access Strings
- Configuring Local SNMPv3 Users
- Configuring Remote SNMPv3 Users
- Specifying Trap Managers
- Creating SNMP Notification Logs
- Showing SNMP Statistics
- Remote Monitoring
- Switch Clustering
- IP Configuration
- IP Services
- Multicast Filtering
- Overview
- Layer 2 IGMP (Snooping and Query)
- Configuring IGMP Snooping and Query Parameters
- Specifying Static Interfaces for a Multicast Router
- Assigning Interfaces to Multicast Services
- Setting IGMP Snooping Status per Interface
- Filtering Multicast Data at Interfaces
- Displaying Multicast Groups Discovered by IGMP Snooping
- Displaying IGMP Snooping Statistics
- Filtering and Throttling IGMP Groups
- MLD Snooping (Snooping and Query for IPv6)
- Multicast VLAN Registration
- Basic Management Tasks
- Appendices
- Glossary
- Index
Chapter 14
| IP Configuration
Setting the Switch’s IP Address (IP Version 6)
– 437 –
■
IPv6 must be enabled on an interface before the MTU can be set. If an IPv6
address has not been assigned to the switch, “N/A” is displayed in the MTU
field.
◆ ND DAD Attempts – The number of consecutive neighbor solicitation
messages sent on an interface during duplicate address detection.
(Range: 0-600, Default: 1)
■
Configuring a value of 0 disables duplicate address detection.
■
Duplicate address detection determines if a new unicast IPv6 address
already exists on the network before it is assigned to an interface.
■
Duplicate address detection is stopped on any interface that has been
suspended (see “Configuring VLAN Groups” on page 138). While an
interface is suspended, all unicast IPv6 addresses assigned to that interface
are placed in a “pending” state. Duplicate address detection is
automatically restarted when the interface is administratively re-activated.
■
An interface that is re-activated restarts duplicate address detection for all
unicast IPv6 addresses on the interface. While duplicate address detection
is performed on the interface’s link-local address, the other IPv6 addresses
remain in a “tentative” state. If no duplicate link-local address is found,
duplicate address detection is started for the remaining IPv6 addresses.
■
If a duplicate address is detected, it is set to “duplicate” state, and a warning
message is sent to the console. If a duplicate link-local address is detected,
IPv6 processes are disabled on the interface. If a duplicate global unicast
address is detected, it is not used. All configuration commands associated
with a duplicate address remain configured while the address is in
“duplicate” state.
■
If the link-local address for an interface is changed, duplicate address
detection is performed on the new link-local address, but not for any of the
IPv6 global unicast addresses already associated with the interface.
◆ ND NS Interval – The interval between transmitting IPv6 neighbor solicitation
messages on an interface. (Range: 1000-3600000 milliseconds;
Default: 1000 milliseconds is used for neighbor discovery operations,
0 milliseconds is advertised in router advertisements.
This attribute specifies the interval between transmitting neighbor solicitation
messages when resolving an address, or when probing the reachability of a
neighbor. Therefore, avoid using very short intervals for normal IPv6
operations.
◆ ND Reachable-Time – The amount of time that a remote IPv6 node is
considered reachable after some reachability confirmation event has occurred.
(Range: 0-3600000 milliseconds; Default: 30000 milliseconds)
◆ Restart DHCPv6 – When DHCPv6 is restarted, the switch may attempt to
acquire an IP address prefix through stateful address autoconfiguration. If the
router advertisements have the “other stateful configuration” flag set, the