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Task Command Remarks
Display information about the IPv6
FIB of a VPN instance.
display ipv6 fib vpn-instance
vpn-instance-name [ acl6 acl6-number |
ipv6-prefix ipv6-prefix-name ] [ | { begin |
exclude | include } regular-expression ]
Available in any view
Display a VPN instance’s FIB
entries that match the specified
destination IPv6 address.
display ipv6 fib vpn-instance
vpn-instance-name ipv6-address
[ prefix-length ] [ | { begin | exclude |
include } regular-expression ]
Available in any view
Display information about IPv6
BGP peers established between the
PE and CE in a VPN instance.
display bgp vpnv6 vpn-instance
vpn-instance-name peer [ ipv6-address
verbose | verbose ] [ | { begin | exclude |
include } regular-expression ]
Available in any view
Display the BGP VPNv6 routing
information of a VPN instance.
display bgp vpnv6 vpn-instance
vpn-instance-name routing-table
[ network-address prefix-length
[ longer-prefixes ] | peer ipv6-address
{ advertised-routes | received-routes } ] [ |
{ begin | exclude | include }
regular-expression ]
Available in any view
For commands that display information about a routing table, see Layer 3—IP Routing Command
Reference.
IPv6 MCE configuration examples
Using IPv6 ISIS to advertise VPN routes to the PE
Network requirements
As shown in Figure 132, the IPv6 MCE device is connected to VPN 1 through VLAN-interface 10 and to
VPN 2 through VLAN-interface 20. RIPng is used in VPN 2.
Configure the IPv6 MCE to separate routes from different VPNs and advertise VPN routes to PE 1 through
OSPFv3.