HP-UX IPv6 Transport Administrator Guide HP-UX 11i v3 (5992-6426, May 2013)
Table Of Contents
- HP-UX IPv6 Transport Administrator Guide
- Contents
- About This Document
- 1 Features Overview
- IPv6 Transport
- New IPv6 Transport Features
- Support for RFC 3542 (Advanced Sockets API for IPv6)
- Configurable Policy Table Support
- Anycast Address Support
- Support for RFC 4291 (IP Version 6 Addressing Architecture)
- Support for RFC 4213 (Basic Transition Mechanisms for IPv6 Hosts and Routers)
- Support for RFC 3484 (Default Address Selection for Internet Protocol version 6 (IPv6))
- Support for RFC 3493 (Basic Socket Interface Extensions for IPv6)
- Support for RFC 4584 (Extension to Sockets API for Mobile IPv6)
- Support for RFC 4193 (Unique Local IPv6 Unicast Addresses)
- Support for RFC 4443 (Internet Control Message Protocol for IPv6 (ICMPv6))
- Support for IPv6 over VLAN
- Ability to Disable Autoconfiguration Based on Router Advertisements
- Support for RFC 3810 (Multicast Listener Discovery Version 2 (MLDv2))
- Support for RFC 3376 (Internet Group Management Protocol Version 3 (IGMPv3))
- Support for RFC 3678 (Socket Extension to Multicast Source Filter API)
- Support for RFC 4941 (Privacy Extensions for Stateless Address Autoconfiguration in IPv6)
- New ndd Tunables
- IPv6 Transport Features Available in the Core HP-UX 11i v3 Operating System
- Limitations
- IPv6 Transport
- 2 Configuration
- Configuring IPv6 Interfaces and Addresses
- Stateless Autoconfiguration
- Manual Configuration
- Configurable Policy Table for Default Address Selection for IPv6
- Host Names and IPv6 Addresses
- 3 Troubleshooting
- 4 IPv6 Addressing and Concepts
- 5 IPv6 Software and Interface Technology
- 6 Utilities
- A IPv6 ndd Tunable Parameters
- Index
On Host A:
— Using ifconfig (ephemeral), enter:
ifconfig iptu0 inet6 tunnel ip6inip fe80::1 fe80::2 tsrc 192.168.1.1 tdst 10.13.2.2 up
— Editing /etc/rc.config.d/netconf-ipv6 (permanent), add:
TUN_INTERFACE_NAME[0]=”iptu0”
TUN_TYPE[0]=”ip6inip”
TUN_LOCAL_ADDRESS[0]=”fe80::1”
TUN_REMOTE_ADDRESS[0]=”fe80::2”
TUN_ENCAP_SRC_ADDRESS[0]=”192.168.1.1”
TUN_ENCAP_DST_ADDRESS[0]=”10.13.2.2”
TUN_INTERFACE_STATE[0]=”up”
On Host B:
— Using ifconfig (ephemeral), enter:
ifconfig iptu0 inet6 tunnel ip6inip fe80::2 fe80::1 tsrc 10.13.2.2 tdst 192.168.1.1 up
— Editing /etc/rc.config.d/netconf-ipv6 (permanent), add:
TUN_INTERFACE_NAME[0]=”iptu0”
TUN_TYPE[0]=”ip6inip”
TUN_LOCAL_ADDRESS[0]=”fe80::2”
TUN_REMOTE_ADDRESS[0]=”fe80::1”
TUN_ENCAP_SRC_ADDRESS[0]=”10.13.2.2”
TUN_ENCAP_DST_ADDRESS[0]=”192.168.1.1”
TUN_INTERFACE_STATE[0]=”up”
Configured IP6-in-IP6 Tunnel (Host-Host) Example
This section provides an example of how to configure a host-host IP6-in-IP6 configured
tunnel . IP6-in-IP6 tunnel configuration allows transmission of IPv6 packets encapsulated
in an IPv6 header.
On Local Host:
— Using ifconfig (ephemeral), enter:
ifconfig ip6tu0 inet6 tunnel ip6inip6 fe80::1 fe80::2 tsrc 2001:db8:2::1 tdst 2001:db8:3::1 up
— Editing /etc/rc.config.d/netconf-ipv6 (permanent), add:
TUN_INTERFACE_NAME[0]=”ip6tu0”
TUN_TYPE[0]=”ip6inip6”
TUN_LOCAL_ADDRESS[0]=”fe80::1”
TUN_REMOTE_ADDRESS[0]=”fe80::2”
TUN_ENCAP_SRC_ADDRESS[0]=”2001:db8:2::1”
TUN_ENCAP_DST_ADDRESS[0]=”2001:db8:3::1”
TUN_INTERFACE_STATE[0]=”up”
Migrating from IPv4 to IPv6 57