Chapter 32 ipv6 vrrpv3 configuration, 1 introduction to vrrpv3, Ntroduction to – QTECH QSW-8300 Инструкция по настройке User Manual

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Chapter 32 IPv6 VRRPv3 Configuration

32.1 Introduction to VRRPv3

VRRPv3 is a virtual router redundancy protocol for IPv6. It is designed based on VRRP

(VRRPv2) in IPv4 environment. The following is a brief introduction to it.

In a network based on TCP/IP protocol, in order to guarantee the communication between the

devices which are not physically connected, routers should be specified. At present there are

two most commonly used methods to specify routers: one is to study dynamically via routing

protocols (such as internal routing protocols RIP and OSPF); the other is to configure statically.

Running dynamical routing protocol on each terminal is unrealistic, since most operating

systems for client end do not support dynamical routing protocol, even if they do, they are

limited by the overheads of management, convergence, security and many other problems. So

the common method is to adopt static routing configuration on terminal IP devices, which

usually means specify one or more default gateway for terminal devices. Static routing

simplifies the management of network and reduces the communication overheads of terminal

devices, but it still has a disadvantage: if the router acting as the default gateway breaks, the

communication of all the hosts which use this gateway as their next hop host. Even if there are

more than one default gateways, before rebooting the terminal devices, they can not switch to

the new gateway. Adopting virtual router redundancy protocol (VRPR) can effectively avoid the

flaws of statically specifying gateways.

In VRRP protocol, there are two groups of import concepts: VRRP routers and virtual routers,

master routers and backup routers. VRRP routers are routers running VRRP, which are

physical entities; virtual routers are the ones created by VRRP, which are logical concepts. A

group of VRRP routers cooperate to comprise a virtual router, which acts outwardly as a logical

router with a unique fixed IP address and MAC address. The routers belonging to the same

VRRP group play two mutually exclusive roles at the same time: master routers and backup

routers. One VRRP group can only have one master router other but one or more backup

routers. VRRPv3 protocol uses selection policy to select a master router from the router group

to take charge of responding ND(Neighbor Discovery) neighbor request messages(ARP in

IPv4) and forwarding IP data packets, while the other routers in the group will be in a state of

waiting as backups. When the master router has a problem for some season, the backup

router will be updated to the master router after a delay of a few seconds. Since this switch is

very fast and does not need to change IP address or MAC address, it will be transparent to

terminal user systems.

In IPv6 environment, the hosts in a LAN usually learn the default gateway via neighbor

discovery protocol (NDP), which is implemented based on regularly receiving advertisement

messages from routers. The NDP of IPv6 has a mechanism called Neighbor Unreachability

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