Re: Understanding IPv6

From: Anthony Sequeira <asequeira_at_internetworkexpert.com>
Date: Wed, 22 Apr 2009 13:45:47 -0400

The DOC-CD is pretty darn good for IPv6 Tunneling once you have
mastered the fundamentals of IPv6.

Multiprotocol BGP for IPv6 is currently NOT in scope for the CCIE R/S
Lab Exam.

Warmest Regards,

Anthony J. Sequeira, CCIE #15626
Senior CCIE Instructor
http://www.InternetworkExpert.com

Internetwork Expert, Inc.
Toll Free: 877-224-8987
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Test your Core Knowledge today!
Q: EIGRP multicast packets have which destination address?
A: 224.0.0.10
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On Apr 22, 2009, at 1:36 PM, Santiago Enciso wrote:

> Is there some white paper to briefing about IPv6 tunneling?
> IS Ipv6 BGP covered under the blueprint?
> Thanks.
>
> Santiago E
>
>
> -----Mensaje original-----
> De: nobody_at_groupstudy.com [mailto:nobody_at_groupstudy.com] En nombre
> de Scott
> Morris
> Enviado el: Miircoles, 22 de Abril de 2009 01:12 a.m.
> Para: ALL From_NJ
> CC: ccielab_at_groupstudy.com
> Asunto: Re: Understanding IPv6
>
> Hmmmm... Well, organizing things into sections is generally a good
> way
> to tackle it.
>
> As for LAN operations, most of those magical things revolve around the
> basic premise that there are NO BROADCASTS! Which is cool in many
> ways. It also (if your old like me (grin)) brings back many of the
> concepts from the old IPX networking days. Back in the day, you set
> up
> a Novell server, you powered up your workstations and relative magic
> happened.
>
> They discovered who they were (duh, it was their MAC). They
> discovered
> where they were (network broadcasts) and discovered what servers were
> around (server advertisement broadcasts).
>
> Now, we've evolved things a little bit, but the general concepts are
> still there. We're just a touch more polite with the multicast and
> anycast idead floating around. Neighbor Discover, Router
> Adverisements,
> Router Solicitations, things like that are the evolution. If you
> aren't
> old like me, then much of it will seem foreign.
>
> It's all about the magic of the network though.
>
> As for the tunneling types... make yourself a list of all the types.
> Go find the RFC's for them, and pay particular attention to what order
> they came about. You'll start to see an evolution pattern that may
> actually make them make some more sense. You are correct, there's a
> number of different things to work with.
>
> And if the lab doesn't spell it out, you can probably do whatever
> method
> you like, in which case I'd pick the easiest! (grin)
>
> HTH,
>
> Scott
>
>
>
> ALL From_NJ wrote:
>> Good question! This assumes I know at least enough to know what I
>> don't
>> know.
>>
>> ;-)
>>
>> I think, for the most part, some of the neighbor relationships and
>> the
> local
>> network activities is a bit foggy. Not sure, but I believe there
>> are some
>> 'extra' activities going on there ... I am also having trouble
>> getting
> all
>> the tunnel options. Unless the lab task spells it out, the options
>> do not
>> 'jump' out at me.
>>
>> Your thoughts?
>>
>>
>>
>>
>> On Wed, Apr 22, 2009 at 12:41 AM, Scott Morris <
>> smorris_at_internetworkexpert.com> wrote:
>>
>>
>>> What part is perplexing you?
>>>
>>> Scott
>>>
>>>
>>> ALL From_NJ wrote:
>>>
>>>
>>>> Hey Team, I hope this finds each one of you doing well.
>>>>
>>>> I am currently studying IPv6. Overall, I believe my studies are
>>>> going
>>>> well
>>>> ... I have gotten to the point where I can do the configs in
>>>> notepad ...
>>>> no
>>>> routers needed. Pretty cool ... "but" ... (dramatic pause please)
>>>>
>>>> I am still lacking some understanding to the protocol operations,
>>>> and
>>>> 'why'
>>>> aspects.
>>>>
>>>> Any suggestions to gain this? Doing debugs has been helpful and of
> course
>>>> reading the doc cd is helpful. What has worked for you all? RFCs,
> CoDs,
>>>> etc ... please share. I feel like there is some 'missing in-the-
>>>> middle
>>>> stuff' that I still need to learn. I am a bit foggy on the why
>>>> and some
>>>> details ... I have not yet had the pleasure to support this or
>>>> roll it
> out
>>>> into a production ...
>>>>
>>>> Your valuable insight is greatly appreciated. Kindest regards
>>>> team,
>
>
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Received on Wed Apr 22 2009 - 13:45:47 ART

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