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Tunnel destination – LevelOne GTL-2691 User Manual

Page 1441

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C

HAPTER

48

| IP Interface Commands

IPv6 to IPv4 Tunnels

– 1441 –

tunnel destination

This command sets the IPv4 address of a tunnel destination (or far end-

point of a tunnel). Use the no form to remove the assigned IPv4 address.

S

YNTAX

tunnel destination ip-address
no tunnel destination

ip-address - IPv4 address of the device at the far end of the tunnel.

D

EFAULT

S

ETTING

None

C

OMMAND

M

ODE

Interface Configuration (IPv6/v4 Tunnel)

C

OMMAND

U

SAGE

This command is only applicable to the “configured” tunnel mode (see

the

tunnel mode ipv6ip

command).

When an IPv6 packet is transmitted over a tunnel, the tunnel end-point

address configured by this command is used as the destination address

for the encapsulating IPv4 header.

The determination of which packets to tunnel is based on information in

the routing table, which directs packets based on their destination

address using the prefix mask and match technique.

IPv6/IPv4 hosts that are connected to data links with no IPv6 routers

may use a configured tunnel to reach an IPv6 router. This tunnel

allows the host to communicate with the rest of the IPv6 Internet (i.e.,

nodes with IPv6-native addresses). If the IPv4 address of an IPv6/IPv4

router bordering the IPv6 backbone is known, this can be used as the

tunnel end-point address. This tunnel can be configured into the

routing table as an IPv6 “default route.” That is, all IPv6 destination

addresses will match the route and could potentially traverse the

tunnel. Since the “mask length” of such a default route is zero, it will be

used only if there are no other routes with a longer mask that match

the destination. Note that the default configured tunnel can also be

used in conjunction with 6to4 automatic tunneling.

The tunnel end-point address of a default tunnel could be the IPv4

address of one IPv6/IPv4 router at the border of the IPv6 backbone.

Alternatively, the tunnel end point could be an IPv4 “anycast address.”

Using this approach, multiple IPv6/IPv4 routers at the border advertise

IPv4 reachability to the same IPv4 address. All of these routers accept

packets to this address as their own, and will decapsulate IPv6 packets

tunneled to this address. When an IPv6/IPv4 node sends an

encapsulated packet to this address, it will be delivered to only one of

the border routers, usually the closest one.

Care must be taken when using a default tunnel to prevent different

IPv4 fragments from arriving at different routers for reassembly. This

can be prevented by either avoiding fragmentation of the encapsulated