Difference between revisions of "IPv6 And OSPFv3 Over DMVPN"
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Once you've got your DMVPN up and running, as shown in [[DMVPN]], you can enable IPv6 and OSPFv3. | Once you've got your DMVPN up and running, as shown in [[DMVPN]], you can enable IPv6 and OSPFv3. | ||
− | Note that the config is largely the same as the IPv4 version. The critical difference is the references to the link-local addresses (FE80::). Without these defined, | + | Note that the config is largely the same as the IPv4 version. The critical difference is the references to the link-local addresses (FE80::). '''Without these defined, OSPF will have issues maintaining adjacencies'''. I've also kept the global addresses mentioned (2001:DB8:DDDD::), mostly for things like pinging and SSH. |
<PRE> | <PRE> |
Revision as of 23:07, 6 April 2015
Once you've got your DMVPN up and running, as shown in DMVPN, you can enable IPv6 and OSPFv3.
Note that the config is largely the same as the IPv4 version. The critical difference is the references to the link-local addresses (FE80::). Without these defined, OSPF will have issues maintaining adjacencies. I've also kept the global addresses mentioned (2001:DB8:DDDD::), mostly for things like pinging and SSH.
ipv6 unicast-routing ipv6 cef ! interface Tunnel0 description DMVPN ipv6 address FE80::1 link-local ipv6 address 2001:DB8:DDDD::1/64 ipv6 mtu 1400 ipv6 nhrp map multicast dynamic ipv6 nhrp map multicast 203.0.113.28 ipv6 nhrp map FE80::2/128 203.0.113.28 ipv6 nhrp map 2001:DB8:DDDD::2/128 203.0.113.28 ipv6 nhrp network-id 1 ipv6 nhrp holdtime 180 ipv6 nhrp nhs FE80::2 ipv6 nhrp nhs 2001:DB8:DDDD::2 ipv6 nhrp registration timeout 60 ipv6 nhrp shortcut ipv6 nhrp redirect ipv6 ospf network broadcast ipv6 ospf priority 128 ipv6 ospf 1 area 0 ! ipv6 router ospf 1 router-id 10.10.10.1