Introduction to ipv4/ipv6 transition tunnels, Ipv6 over ipv4 tunnel, Implementation – H3C Technologies H3C S7500E Series Switches User Manual

Page 159

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15-2

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The term tunnel used throughout this document refers to an IPv4/IPv6 transition tunnel, IPv4 over

IPv4 tunnel or IPv6 over IPv6 tunnel unless otherwise specified.

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For information about MPLS TE, refer to MPLS TE Configuration in the MPLS Configuration

Guide.

Introduction to IPv4/IPv6 Transition Tunnels

The expansion of the Internet results in scarce IPv4 addresses. The technologies such as temporary

IPv4 address allocation and Network Address Translation (NAT) relieve the problem of IPv4 address

shortage to some extent. However, these technologies not only increase the overhead in address

resolution and processing, but also lead to upper-layer application failures. Furthermore, they will still

face the problem that IPv4 addresses will eventually be used up. Internet Protocol Version 6 (IPv6)

adopting the 128-bit addressing scheme completely solves the above problem. Since significant

improvements have been made in address space, security, network management, mobility, and QoS,

IPv6 becomes one of the core standards for the next generation Internet protocol. IPv6 is compatible

with all protocols except IPv4 in the TCP/IP suite. Therefore, IPv6 can completely take the place of

IPv4.

Before IPv6 becomes the dominant protocol, networks using the IPv6 protocol stack are expected to

communicate with the Internet using IPv4. Therefore, an IPv6-IPv4 interworking technology must be

developed to ensure the smooth transition from IPv4 to IPv6. In addition, the interworking technology

should provide efficient, seamless information transfer. Currently, multiple transition technologies and

interworking solutions are available. With their own characteristics, they are used to solve

communication problems in different transition stages under different environments.

Currently, there are three major transition technologies: dual stack (RFC 2893), tunneling (RFC 2893),

and NAT-PT (RFC 2766).

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For related information about dual stack, refer to IPv6 Basics Configuration in the Layer 3 - IP

Services Configuration Guide.

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The S7500E series Ethernet switches do not support NAT-PT.

IPv6 over IPv4 Tunnel

Implementation

The IPv6 over IPv4 tunneling mechanism encapsulates an IPv4 header in IPv6 data packets so that

IPv6 packets can pass an IPv4 network through a tunnel to realize interworking between isolated IPv6

networks, as shown in

Figure 15-1

.

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