HP 6120XG HP ProCurve Series 6120 Blade Switches IPv6 Configuration Guide - Page 82

Duplicate Address Detection (DAD) for Statically Con d Addresses, Disabling IPv6 on a VLAN

Page 82 highlights

IPv6 Addressing Configuration Disabling IPv6 on a VLAN Note Duplicate Address Detection (DAD) for Statically Configured Addresses Statically configured IPv6 addresses are designated as permanent. If DAD determines that a statically configured address duplicates a previously config­ ured and reachable address on another device belonging to the VLAN, then the more recent, duplicate address is designated as duplicate. For more on this topic, refer to: ■ "Duplicate Address Detection (DAD)" on page 4-18. ■ "View the Current IPv6 Addressing Configuration" on page 4-22 Multiple, duplicate addresses configured as Anycast on different devices are special cases of unicast addresses, and are not identified as duplicates by DAD. Refer to "Anycast Addresses" on page 3-20. Disabling IPv6 on a VLAN While one IPv6-enabling command is configured on a VLAN, IPv6 remains enabled on that VLAN. In this case, removing the only IPv6-enabling command from the configuration disables IPv6 operation on the VLAN. That is, to disable IPv6 on a VLAN, all of the following commands must be removed from the VLAN's configuration: ipv6 enable ipv6 address dhcp full [rapid-commit] ipv6 address autoconfig ipv6 address fe80::< device-identifier > link-local ipv6 address < prefix > : < device-identifier > If any of the above remain enabled, then IPv6 remains enabled on the VLAN and, at a minimum, a link-local unicast address will be present. 4-16

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IPv6 Addressing Configuration
Disabling IPv6 on a VLAN
Duplicate Address Detection (DAD) for Statically
Configured Addresses
Statically configured IPv6 addresses are designated as permanent. If DAD
determines that a statically configured address duplicates a previously config-
ured and reachable address on another device belonging to the VLAN, then
the more recent, duplicate address is designated as
duplicate
. For more on this
topic, refer to:
“Duplicate Address Detection (DAD)” on page 4-18.
“View the Current IPv6 Addressing Configuration” on page 4-22
Note
Multiple, duplicate addresses configured as Anycast on different devices are
special cases of unicast addresses, and are not identified as duplicates by
DAD. Refer to “Anycast Addresses” on page 3-20.
Disabling IPv6 on a VLAN
While one IPv6-enabling command is configured on a VLAN, IPv6 remains
enabled on that VLAN. In this case, removing the only IPv6-enabling
command
from the configuration disables IPv6 operation on the VLAN. That is, to disable
IPv6 on a VLAN, all of the following commands must be removed from the
VLAN's configuration:
ipv6 enable
ipv6 address dhcp full [rapid-commit]
ipv6 address autoconfig
ipv6 address fe80::<
device-identifier
> link-local
ipv6 address <
prefix >
: <
device-identifier
>
If any of the above remain enabled, then IPv6 remains enabled on the VLAN
and, at a minimum, a link-local unicast address will be present.
4-16