IPv6 switch. You can provision an IPv6 AP in the network only if the switch interface is configured with an IPv6
address. An IPv6 AP can serve both IPv4 and IPv6 clients.
You must manually configure an IPv6 address on the switch interface to enable IPv6 support.
You can perform the following IPv6 operations on the switch:
n Configuring IPv6 Addresses on page 133
n Configuring IPv6 Static Neighbors on page 134
n Configuring IPv6 Default Gateway and Static IPv6 Routes on page 135
n Managing Switch IP Addresses on page 135
n Configuring Multicast Listener Discovery on page 136
n Debugging an IPv6 Switch on page 138
n Provisioning an IPv6 AP on page 138
n Monitoring Bandwidth Usage on page 139
You can also view the IPv6 statistics on the switch using the following commands:
n show datapath ip-reassembly ipv6 — View the IPv6 contents of the IP Reassembly statistics table.
n show datapath route ipv6 — View datapath IPv6 routing table.
n show datapath route-cache ipv6 — View datapath IPv6 route cache.
n show datapath tunnel ipv6 — View the tcp tunnel table filtered on IPv6 entries.
n show datapath user ipv6 — View datapath IPv6 user statistics such as current entries, pending deletes,
high water mark, maximum entries, total entries, allocation failures, invalid users, and maximum link length.
n show datapath session ipv6 — View datapath IPv6 session entries and statistics such as current entries,
pending deletes, high water mark, maximum entries, total entries, allocation failures, invalid users, and
maximum link length.
Additionally, you can view the IPv6 AP information on the switch using the following show commands:
n show ap database
n show ap active
n show user
n show ap details ip6-addr
n show ap debug
The following table lists IPv6 features:
Features Supported on IPv6 APs?
Forward Mode - Tunnel Yes
Forward Mode - Decrypt Tunnel No
Forward Mode - Bridge No
Forward Mode - Split Tunnel No
AP Type - CAP Yes
Table 35: IPv6 APs Support Matrix
AOS-W 6.5.3.x | User Guide IPv6 Support | 132