279
Static Routing table Status : <Inactive>
Summary Count : 0
# Use the ping command to test the reachability.
[SwitchA] ping ipv6 3::1
PING6(104=40+8+56 bytes) 4::1 --> 3::1
56 bytes from 3::1, icmp_seq=0 hlim=62 time=4.000 ms
56 bytes from 3::1, icmp_seq=1 hlim=62 time=3.000 ms
56 bytes from 3::1, icmp_seq=2 hlim=62 time=2.000 ms
56 bytes from 3::1, icmp_seq=3 hlim=62 time=2.000 ms
56 bytes from 3::1, icmp_seq=4 hlim=62 time=2.000 ms
--- 3::1 ping6 statistics ---
5 packet(s) transmitted, 5 packet(s) received, 0.0% packet loss
round-trip min/avg/max/std-dev = 2.000/10.200/42.000/15.905 ms
BFD for IPv6 static routes configuration example (direct next
hop)
Network requirements
In Figure 72, configure an IPv6 static route to subnet 120::/64 on Switch A, and configure an IPv6 static
route to subnet 121::/64 on Switch B. Enable BFD for both routes. Configure an IPv6 static route to subnet
120::/64 and an IPv6 static route to subnet 121::/64 on Switch C. When the link between Switch A and
Switch B through the Layer 2 switch fails, BFD can detect the failure immediately, and Switch A and
Switch B can communicate through Switch C.
Figure 72 Network diagram
Device Interface IPv6 address
Configuration procedure
1. Configure IPv6 addresses for interfaces. (Details not shown.)
2. Configure IPv6 static routes and BFD:
# Configure IPv6 static routes on Switch A and enable BFD control mode for the static route that
traverses the Layer 2 switch.
<SwitchA> system-view