IP Configuration
IPv6 Management and Interfaces
Cisco Small Business 200, 300 and 500 Series Managed Switch Administration Guide (Internal Version) 321
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network. Only one link local address is supported. If a link local address
exists on the interface, this entry replaces the address in the
configuration.
-Global—An IPv6 address that is a global Unicast IPV6 type that is visible
and reachable from other networks.
-Point-to-Point—A Point-to-point tunnel.
Metric—Value used for comparing this route to other routes with the same
destination in the IPv6 router table. All default routes have the same value.
Lifetime—Time period during which the packet can be sent, and resent,
before being deleted.
Route Type—How the destination is attached, and the method used to
obtain the entry. The following values are:
-

Local

—A directly-connected network whose prefix is derived from a
manually-configured device’s IPv6 address.
-
Dynamic
—The destination is an indirectly-attached (remote) IPv6 subnet
address. The entry was obtained dynamically via the ND or ICMP
protocol.
-
Static
—The entry was manually configured by a user.
DHCPv6 Relay
DHCPv6 Relay is used for relaying DHCPv6 messages to DHCPv6 servers. It is
defined in RFC 3315.
When the DHCPv6 client is not directly connected to the DHCPv6 server, a
DHCPv6 relay agent (the device) to which this DHCPv6 client is directly-
connected encapsulates the received messages from the directly-connected
DHCPv6 client, and forwards them to the DHCPv6 server.
In the opposite direction, the relay agent decapsulates packets received from the
DHCPv6 server and forwards them, towards the DHCPv6 client.
The user must configure the list DHCP servers to which packets are forwarded.
Two sets of DHCPv6 servers can be configured:
Global Destinations—Packets are always relayed to these DHCPv6 servers.