2.2.4.4 Packet Tracer Configuring IPv6 Static And Routes Instructions
2.2.4.4%20Packet%20Tracer%20-%20Configuring%20IPv6%20Static%20and%20Default%20Routes%20Instructions
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Packet Tracer - Configuring IPv6 Static and Default Routes
IPv6 Addressing Table
Device
Interface
IPv6 Address/Prefix
Default Gateway
R1
G0/0
2001:DB8:1:1::1/64
N/A
S0/0/0
2001:DB8:1:A001::1/64
N/A
R2
G0/0
2001:DB8:1:2::1/64
N/A
S0/0/0
2001:DB8:1:A001::2/64
N/A
S0/0/1
2001:DB8:1:A002::1/64
N/A
R3
G0/0
2001:DB8:1:3::1/64
N/A
S0/0/1
2001:DB8:1:A002::2/64
N/A
PC1
NIC
2001:DB8:1:1::F/64
FE80::1
PC2
NIC
2001:DB8:1:2::F/64
FE80::2
PC3
NIC
2001:DB8:1:3::F/64
FE80::3
Objectives
Part 1: Examine the Network and Evaluate the Need for Static Routing
Part 2: Configure IPv6 Static and Default Routes
Part 3: Verify Connectivity
Background
In this activity, you will configure IPv6 static and default routes. A static route is a route that is entered
manually by the network administrator in order to create a route that is reliable and safe. There are four
Packet Tracer - Configuring IPv6 Static and Default Routes
© 2013 Cisco and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved. This document is Cisco Public. Page 2 of 3
different static routes used in this activity: a recursive static route; a directly attached static route; a fully
specified static route; and a default route.
Part 1: Examine the Network and Evaluate the Need for Static Routing
a. Looking at the topology diagram, how many networks are there in total?
b. How many networks are directly connected to R1, R2, and R3?
c. How many static routes are required by each router to reach networks that are not directly connected?
d. Which command is used to configure IPv6 static routes?
Part 2: Configure IPv6 Static and Default Routes
Step 1: Enable IPv6 routing on all routers.
Before configuring static routes, we must configure the router to forward IPv6 packets
Which command accomplishes this?
Enter this command on each router.
Step 2: Configure recursive static routes on R1.
Configure an IPv6 recursive static route to every network not directly connected to R1.
Step 3: Configure a directly attached and a fully specified static route on R2.
a. Configure a directly attached static route from R2 to the R1 LAN.
b. Configure a fully specific route from R2 to the R3 LAN.
Note: Packet Tracer v6.0.1 only checks for directly attached and recursive static routes. Your instructor
may ask to review your configuration of a fully specified IPv6 static route.
Step 4: Configure a default route on R3.
Configure a recursive default route on R3 to reach all networks not directly connected.
Step 5: Verify static route configurations.
a. Which command is used in Packet Tracer to verify the IPv6 configuration of a PC from the command prompt?
b. Which command displays the IPv6 addresses configured on a router's interface?
c. Which command displays the contents of the IPv6 routing table?
Part 3: Verify Network Connectivity
Every device should now be able to ping every other device. If not, review your static and default route
configurations.
Packet Tracer - Configuring IPv6 Static and Default Routes
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Suggested Scoring Rubric
Activity Section
Question
Location
Possible
Points
Earned
Points
Part 1: Exam the Network and
Evaluate the Need for Static
Routing
a - d
20
Part 1 Total
20
Part 2: Configure IPv6 Static and
Default Routes
Step 1
5
Step 5
15
Part 2 Total
20
Packet Tracer Score
60
Total Score
100