Netgear M5300-28GF3 Web Management User Guide - Page 201
IPv6, Basic, stack is used for transport of both IPv4 and IPv6
View all Netgear M5300-28GF3 manuals
Add to My Manuals
Save this manual to your list of manuals |
Page 201 highlights
ProSafe M5300 Switch IPv6 IPv6 is the next generation of the Internet Protocol. With 128-bit addresses, versus 32-bit addresses for IPv4, IPv6 solves the address depletion issues seen with IPv4 and removes the requirement for Network Address Translation (NAT), which is used in IPv4 networks to reduce the number of globally unique IP addresses required for a given network. Its aggregate addresses can dramatically reduce the size of the global routing table through well known address combinations. Security is more integrated and network configuration is simplified yet more flexible. IPv6 can coexists with IPv4. As with IPv4, IPv6 routing can be enabled on physical and VLAN interfaces. Each L3 routing interface can be used for IPv4, IPv6, or both. IP protocols running over L3 (for example, UDP and TCP) do not change with IPv6. For this reason, a single CPU stack is used for transport of both IPv4 and IPv6, and a single sockets interface provides access to both. Routing protocols are capable of computing routes for one or both IP versions. From the IPv6 link, you can access the following pages: • Basic on page 201 • Advanced on page 204 Basic From the Basic link, you can access the following pages: • IPv6 Global Configuration on page 202 • IPv6 Route Table on page 203 Routing 201