IPv6 uses the file /etc/hostname6.interface at start up to automatically define network interfaces in the same way IPv4 uses /etc/hostname.interface. A minimum of one /etc/hostname.* or /etc/hostname6.* file should exist on the local machine. The Solaris installation program creates these files for you. In the file name, replace interface with the device name of the primary network interface.
The file name has the following syntax:
hostname.interface hostname6.interface |
Interface has the following syntax:
dev[.Module[.Module ...]]PPA |
Dev |
A network interface device. The device can be a physical network interface, such as le, qe, and so on, or a logical interface, such as a tunnel. See Solaris Tunneling Interfaces for IPv6 for more details. |
Module |
The list of one or more streams modules to be pushed onto the device when the device is plumbed. |
PPA |
The physical point of attachment. |
The syntax [.[.]] is also accepted.
The following list shows examples of valid file names:
hostname6.le0 hostname6.ip.tun0 hostname.ip.tun0 |
The autoconfiguration of interfaces in IPv6 enables a node to compute its own link-local address that is based on its link-layer address. Consequently, the interface configuration file for IPv6 might not have an entry. In this instance, the startup scripts configure an interface. The node then “learns” of other addresses and prefixes through the neighbor discovery daemon, in.ndpd. If you require static addresses for an interface, use the ifconfig utility. Consequently, the address or host name is stored in /etc/hostname6.interface (or /etc/hostname.interface. The content is passed to ifconfig when the interface is configured.
In this instance, the file contains only one entry. The entry is the host name or IP address that is associated with the network interface. For example, suppose smc0 is the primary network interface for a machine that is called ahaggar. The /etc/hostname6.* file for the interface would have the name /etc/hostname6.smc0. The file would contain the entry ahaggar.
The networking start up script examines the number of interfaces and the existence of the /etc/inet/ndpd.conf file to start routing daemons and packet forwarding. See How to Configure a Solaris IPv6 Router.
The ifconfig utility now enables IPv6 interfaces and the tunneling module to be plumbed. The ifconfig(1M) utility uses an extended set of ioctls to configure both IPv4 and IPv6 network interfaces. The following table shows the set of options that are added to this utility. See How to Display Interface Address Assignments for a description of useful diagnostic procedures that use this utility.
Table 16–1 New ifconfig Utility Options
Option |
Description |
---|---|
index |
Set the interface index. |
tsrc/tdst |
Set tunnel source or destination. |
addif |
Create the next available logical interface. |
removeif |
Delete a logical interface with a specific IP address. |
destination |
Set the point-to-point destination address for an interface. |
set |
Set an address, netmask, or both for an interface. |
subnet |
Set the subnet address of an interface. |
xmit/-xmit |
Enable or disable packet transmission on an interface. |
Enabling IPv6 Nodes provides IPv6 configuration procedures.
The following usage of the ifconfig command creates the hme0:3 logical interface to the 1234::5678/64 IPv6 address. This command enables the interface with the up option. The command also reports status. The command disables the interface. Finally, the command deletes the interface.
# ifconfig hme0 inet6 addif 1234::5678/64 up Created new logical interface hme0:3 # ifconfig hme0:3 inet6 hme0:3: flags=2000841<UP,RUNNING,MULTICAST,IPv6> mtu 1500 index 2 inet6 1234::5678/64 # ifconfig hme0:3 inet6 down # ifconfig hme0 inet6 removeif 1234::5678 |
The following usage of the ifconfig command opens the device that is associated with the physical interface name. The command configures the streams that are needed for TCP/IP to use the device. The command reports the status of the device. The command configures the source and the destination address for the tunnel. Finally, the command reports the new status of the device after the configuration.
# ifconfig ip.tun0 inet6 plumb index 13 # ifconfig ip.tun0 inet6 ip.tun0: flags=2200850<POINTOPOINT,RUNNING,MULTICAST,NONUD,IPv6> mtu 1480 index 13 inet tunnel src 0.0.0.0 inet6 fe80::/10 --> :: # ifconfig ip.tun0 inet6 tsrc 120.46.86.158 tdst 120.46.86.122 # ifconfig ip.tun0 inet6 ip.tun0: flags=2200850<POINTOPOINT,RUNNING,MULTICAST,NONUD,IPv6> mtu 1480 index 13 inet tunnel src 120.46.86.158 tunnel dst 120.46.86.122 inet6 fe80::8192:569e/10 --> fe80::8192:567a |