- Table of Contents
-
- H3C Fixed Port Campus Switches Configuration Examples-B70D029-6W100
- 01-Login Management Configuration Examples
- 02-RBAC Configuration Examples
- 03-Software Upgrade Examples
- 04-ISSU Configuration Examples
- 05-Software Patching Examples
- 06-Ethernet Link Aggregation Configuration Examples
- 07-Port Isolation Configuration Examples
- 08-Spanning Tree Configuration Examples
- 09-VLAN Configuration Examples
- 10-VLAN Tagging Configuration Examples
- 11-DHCP Snooping Configuration Examples
- 12-Cross-Subnet Dynamic IP Address Allocation Configuration Examples
- 13-IPv6 over IPv4 Tunneling with OSPFv3 Configuration Examples
- 14-IPv6 over IPv4 GRE Tunnel Configuration Examples
- 15-GRE with OSPF Configuration Examples
- 16-OSPF Configuration Examples
- 17-IS-IS Configuration Examples
- 18-BGP Configuration Examples
- 19-Policy-Based Routing Configuration Examples
- 20-OSPFv3 Configuration Examples
- 21-IPv6 IS-IS Configuration Examples
- 22-Routing Policy Configuration Examples
- 23-IGMP Snooping Configuration Examples
- 24-IGMP Configuration Examples
- 25-MLD Snooping Configuration Examples
- 26-IPv6 Multicast VLAN Configuration Examples
- 27-ACL Configuration Examples
- 28-Traffic Policing Configuration Examples
- 29-GTS and Rate Limiting Configuration Examples
- 30-Priority Mapping and Queue Scheduling Configuration Examples
- 31-Traffic Filtering Configuration Examples
- 32-AAA Configuration Examples
- 33-Port Security Configuration Examples
- 34-Portal Configuration Examples
- 35-SSH Configuration Examples
- 36-IP Source Guard Configuration Examples
- 37-Ethernet OAM Configuration Examples
- 38-CFD Configuration Examples
- 39-DLDP Configuration Examples
- 40-VRRP Configuration Examples
- 41-BFD Configuration Examples
- 42-NTP Configuration Examples
- 43-SNMP Configuration Examples
- 44-NQA Configuration Examples
- 45-Mirroring Configuration Examples
- 46-sFlow Configuration Examples
- 47-OpenFlow Configuration Examples
- 48-MAC Address Table Configuration Examples
- 49-Static Multicast MAC Address Entry Configuration Examples
- 50-IP Unnumbered Configuration Examples
- 51-MVRP Configuration Examples
- 52-MCE Configuration Examples
- 53-Attack Protection Configuration Examples
- 54-Smart Link Configuration Examples
- 55-RRPP Configuration Examples
- 56-BGP Route Selection Configuration Examples
- 57-IS-IS Route Summarization Configuration Examples
- 58-IRF Configuration Examples
- 59-VXLAN Configuration Examples
- Related Documents
-
Title | Size | Download |
---|---|---|
14-IPv6 over IPv4 GRE Tunnel Configuration Examples | 65.12 KB |
Introduction
This document provides IPv6 over IPv4 GRE tunnel configuration examples.
Prerequisites
The configuration examples in this document were created and verified in a lab environment, and all the devices were started with the factory default configuration. When you are working on a live network, make sure you understand the potential impact of every command on your network.
This document assumes that you have basic knowledge of GRE.
Example: Configuring an IPv6 over IPv4 GRE tunnel
Network configuration
As shown in Figure 1, Device A, Device B, and Device C are all on an IPv4 network. Dual stack devices Device A and Device B each connect to an IPv6 host.
Configure a GRE/IPv4 tunnel between Device A and Device B, so PC A and PC B can communicate with each other over the IPv4 network.
Analysis
To meet the network requirements, perform the following tasks:
· To enable the IPv6 hosts to communicate over the IPv4 network, specify the GRE tunnel mode as GRE/IPv4 and configure IPv6 addresses for the tunnel interfaces.
· To transmit packets between PC A and PC B through the GRE tunnel, configure a route reaching the destination network through the tunnel interface on Device A and Device B. You can configure the routes by using either of the following methods:
¡ Configure static routes, using the peer tunnel interface as the next hop or using the local tunnel interface as the outgoing interface.
¡ Enable a dynamic routing protocol on both the tunnel interfaces and the Layer 3 interfaces connected to PC A and PC B.
· For both ends of the GRE tunnel to reach each other, configure a static route reaching the remote end on Device A and Device B.
Applicable hardware and software versions
The following matrix shows the hardware and software versions to which this configuration example is applicable:
Hardware |
Software version |
S6520X-HI switch series S6520X-EI switch series |
Supported in Release 1110P01 |
S6520X-SI switch series S6520-SI switch series S5000-EI switch series MS4600 switch series |
Supported in Release 1110P01 |
Restrictions and guidelines
When you configure the GRE tunnel, you must configure the tunnel source address and destination address at both ends of the tunnel. The tunnel source or destination address at one end must be the tunnel destination or source address at the other end.
Procedures
Configuring Device A
# Configure VLAN-interface 20.
<DeviceA> system-view
[DeviceA] vlan 20
[DeviceA-vlan20] port Ten-GigabitEthernet 1/0/1
[DeviceA-vlan20] quit
[DeviceA] interface vlan-interface 20
[DeviceA-vlan-interface20] ipv6 address 1001::1 64
[DeviceA-vlan-interface20] quit
# Configure other interfaces in the same way VLAN-interface 20 is configured. (Details not shown.)
# Create a tunnel interface named Tunnel 0, and specify the tunnel mode as GRE/IPv4.
[DeviceA] interface tunnel 0 mode gre
# Configure an IPv6 address for tunnel interface Tunnel 0.
[DeviceA-Tunnel0] ipv6 address 3001::1 64
# Configure the source address of tunnel interface Tunnel 0 as the IP address of VLAN-interface 10.
[DeviceA-Tunnel0] source 192.13.2.2
# Configure the destination address of tunnel interface Tunnel 0 as the IP address of VLAN-interface 11 on Device B.
[DeviceA-Tunnel0] destination 131.108.5.2
[DeviceA-Tunnel0] quit
# Configure a static route reaching PC B through tunnel interface Tunnel 0.
[DeviceA] ipv6 route-static 2001:: 64 tunnel 0
# Configure a static route reaching the remote end of the GRE tunnel.
[DeviceA] ip route-static 131.108.5.2 255.255.255.0 192.13.2.1
Configuring Device B
# Configure VLAN-interface 20.
<DeviceB> system-view
[DeviceB] vlan 20
[DeviceB-vlan20] port Ten-GigabitEthernet 1/0/1
[DeviceB] interface vlan-interface 20
[DeviceB-Vlan-interface20] ipv6 address 2001::1 64
[DeviceB-Vlan-interface20] quit
# Configure other interfaces in the same way VLAN-interface 20 is configured. (Details not shown.)
# Create a tunnel interface named Tunnel 0, and specify the tunnel mode as GRE/IPv4.
[DeviceB] interface tunnel 0 mode gre
# Configure an IPv6 address for tunnel interface Tunnel 0.
[DeviceB-Tunnel0] ipv6 address 3001::2 64
# Configure the source address of tunnel interface Tunnel 0 as the IP address of VLAN-interface 11.
[DeviceB-Tunnel0] source 131.108.5.2
# Configure the destination address of tunnel interface Tunnel 0 as the IP address of VLAN-interface 10 on Device A.
[DeviceB-Tunnel0] destination 192.13.2.2
[DeviceB-Tunnel0] quit
# Configure a static route reaching PC A through tunnel interface Tunnel 0.
[DeviceB] ipv6 route-static 1001:: 64 Tunnel 0
# Configure a static route reaching the remote end of the GRE tunnel.
[DeviceB] ip route-static 192.13.2.2 255.255.255.0 131.108.5.1
Configuring Device C
# Configure VLAN-interface 10.
<DeviceC> system-view
[DeviceC] vlan 10
[DeviceC-vlan10] port Ten-GigabitEthernet 1/0/1
[DeviceC-vlan10] quit
[DeviceC] interface Vlan-interface 10
[DeviceC-Vlan-interface10] ip address 192.13.2.1 24
[DeviceC-Vlan-interface10] quit
# Configure VLAN-interface 11.
[DeviceC] vlan 11
[DeviceC-vlan11] port Ten-GigabitEthernet 1/0/2
[DeviceC-vlan11] quit
[DeviceC] interface vlan-interface 11
[DeviceC-Vlan-interface11] ip address 131.108.5.1 24
[DeviceC-Vlan-interface11] quit
Verifying the configuration
# Verify that PC A and PC B can ping each other successfully. This example uses PC A to ping PC B.
C:\>ping6 2001::2
Pinging 2001::2
from 1001::1 with 32 bytes of data:
Reply from 2001::2: bytes=32 time<1ms
Reply from 2001::2: bytes=32 time<1ms
Reply from 2001::2: bytes=32 time<1ms
Reply from 2001::2: bytes=32 time<1ms
Ping statistics for 2001::2:
Packets: Sent = 4, Received = 4, Lost = 0 (0% loss),
Approximate round trip times in milli-seconds:
Minimum = 0ms, Maximum = 0ms, Average = 0ms
Configuration files
· Device A:
#
vlan 10
#
vlan 20
#
interface Vlan-interface10
ip address 192.13.2.2 255.255.255.0
#
interface Vlan-interface20
ipv6 address 1001::1/64
#
interface Ten-GigabitEthernet1/0/1
port link-mode bridge
port access vlan 20
#
interface Ten-GigabitEthernet1/0/2
port link-mode bridge
port access vlan 10
#
interface Tunnel0 mode gre
ipv6 address 3001::1/64
source 192.13.2.2
destination 131.108.5.2
#
ip route-static 131.108.5.2 255.255.255.0 192.13.2.1
#
ipv6 route-static 2001:: 64 Tunnel 0
#
· Device B:
#
vlan 11
#
vlan 20
#
interface Vlan-interface11
ip address 131.108.5.2 255.255.255.0
#
interface Vlan-interface20
ipv6 address 2001::1/64
#
interface Ten-GigabitEthernet1/0/1
port link-mode bridge
port access vlan 20
#
interface Ten-GigabitEthernet1/0/2
port link-mode bridge
port access vlan 11
#
interface Tunnel0 mode gre
ipv6 address 3001::2/64
source 131.108.5.2
destination 192.13.2.2
#
ip route-static 192.13.2.2 255.255.255.0 131.108.5.1
#
ipv6 route-static 1001:: 64 Tunnel 0
#
· Device C:
#
vlan 10 to 11
#
interface Vlan-interface10
ip address 192.13.2.1 255.255.255.0
#
interface Vlan-interface11
ip address 131.108.5.1 255.255.255.0
#
interface Ten-GigabitEthernet1/0/1
port link-mode bridge
port access vlan 10
#
interface Ten-GigabitEthernet1/0/2
port link-mode bridge
port access vlan 11
#