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Administering TCP/IP Networks, IPMP, and IP Tunnels in Oracle
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Solaris 11.2
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Updated: July 2014
Administering TCP/IP Networks, IPMP, and IP Tunnels in Oracle
®
Solaris 11.2
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Chapter 1 Administering TCP/IP Networks
Customizing TCP/IP Properties
Enabling Packet Forwarding Globally
Administering Default Address Selection
Description of the /etc/inet/ipaddrsel.conf Configuration File
Description of the ipaddrsel Command
Reasons to Modify the IPv6 Address Selection Policy Table
How to Administer the IPv6 Address Selection Policy Table
How to Modify the IPv6 Address Selection Table for the Current Session Only
Administering Transport Layer Services
Setting Up a Privileged Port
Implementing Traffic Congestion Control
Logging IP Addresses of All Incoming TCP Connections
Adding Services That Use the SCTP Protocol
How to Add Services That Use the SCTP Protocol
Configuring TCP Wrappers
How to Use TCP Wrappers to Control Access to TCP Services
Changing the TCP Receive Buffer Size
Monitoring Network Status With the netstat Command
Filtering netstat Output by Address Type
Displaying the Status of Sockets
Displaying Statistics by Protocol
Displaying Network Interface Status
Displaying User and Process Information
Displaying the Status of Known Routes
Displaying Additional Network Status With the netstat Command
Performing TCP and UDP Administration With the netcat Utility
Administering and Logging Network Status Displays
How to Control the Display Output of IP-Related Commands
Logging Actions of the IPv4 Routing Daemon
How to Trace the Activities of the IPv6 Neighbor Discovery Daemon
Probing Remote Hosts With the ping Command
ping Command Modifications for IPv6 Support
Determining if a Remote Host Is Reachable
Determining if Packets Between Your Host and a Remote Host Are Being Dropped
Displaying Routing Information With the traceroute Command
traceroute Command Modifications for IPv6 Support
Discovering the Route to a Remote Host
Tracing All Routes
Analyzing Network Traffic With the TShark and Wireshark Analysers
Monitoring Packet Transfers With the snoop Command
snoop Command Modifications for IPv6 Support
How to Check Packets From All Interfaces
How to Check Packets From an IPMP Group
How to Capture snoop Output to a File
How to Check Packets Between an IPv4 Server and a Client
Monitoring IPv6 Network Traffic
Monitoring Packets by Using IP Layer Devices
How to Check Packets on the IP Layer
Methods for Checking Packets
Observing Network Traffic With the ipstat and tcpstat Commands
Chapter 2 About IPMP Administration
What's New in IPMP
IPMP Configuration Changes
IPMP Support in Oracle Solaris
Benefits of Using IPMP
Rules for Using IPMP
IPMP Components
Types of IPMP Interface Configurations
How IPMP Works
IPMP Addressing
Data Addresses
Test Addresses
Failure Detection in IPMP
Probe-Based Failure Detection
Probe-Based Failure Detection Using Test Addresses
Probe-Based Failure Detection Without Using Test Addresses
Group Failure
Link-Based Failure Detection
Failure Detection and the Anonymous Group Feature
Detecting Physical Interface Repairs
FAILBACK=no Mode
IPMP and Dynamic Reconfiguration
Chapter 3 Administering IPMP
Configuring IPMP Groups
How to Plan an IPMP Group
How to Configure an IPMP Group That Uses DHCP
How to Configure an Active-Active IPMP Group
How to Configure an Active-Standby IPMP Group
Maintaining Routing While Deploying IPMP
How to Preserve the Default Route While Using IPMP
Administering IPMP
How to Add an Interface to an IPMP Group
How to Remove an Interface From an IPMP Group
How to Add IP Addresses to an IPMP Group
How to Delete IP Addresses From an IPMP Interface
How to Move an Interface From One IPMP Group to Another IPMP Group
How to Delete an IPMP Group
Configuring Probe-Based Failure Detection
About Probe-Based Failure Detection
Requirements for Choosing Targets for Probe-based Failure Detection
Selecting a Failure Detection Method
How to Manually Specify Target Systems for Probe-Based Failure Detection
How to Configure the Behavior of the IPMP Daemon
Monitoring IPMP Information
Customizing the Output of the ipmpstat Command
Using the ipmpstat Command in Scripts
Chapter 4 About IP Tunnel Administration
What's New in IP Tunnel Administration
IP Tunnel Feature Summary
Types of Tunnels
Tunnels in the Combined IPv6 and IPv4 Network Environments
6to4 Tunnels
Topology of a 6to4 Tunnel
6to4relay Command
Packet Flow Through the 6to4 Tunnel
Considerations for Enabling Tunnels to a 6to4 Relay Router
Packet Flow Between a 6to4 Site and a Native IPv6 Site
About Deploying IP Tunnels
Requirements for Creating IP Tunnels
Requirements for IP Tunnels and IP Interfaces
Chapter 5 Administering IP Tunnels
IP Tunnel Administration in Oracle Solaris
Administering IP Tunnels
How to Create and Configure an IP Tunnel
How to Configure a 6to4 Tunnel
How to Enable a 6to4 Tunnel to a 6to4 Relay Router
Modifying an IP Tunnel Configuration
Displaying an IP Tunnel's Configuration
Displaying an IP Tunnel's Properties
How to Delete an IP Tunnel
Index
Index Numbers and Symbols
Index A
Index B
Index C
Index D
Index E
Index F
Index G
Index H
Index I
Index L
Index M
Index N
Index P
Index R
Index S
Index T
Index U
Index V
Index W
Language:
English
R
Reconfiguration Coordination Manager (RCM) framework
IPMP and Dynamic Reconfiguration
relay router, 6to4 tunnel configuration
How to Enable a 6to4 Tunnel to a 6to4 Relay Router
How to Enable a 6to4 Tunnel to a 6to4 Relay Router
repair detection time
Detecting Physical Interface Repairs
route
command
–inet6
option
About Probe-Based Failure Detection
routers
role, in 6to4 topology
Topology of a 6to4 Tunnel
routing and IPMP
Maintaining Routing While Deploying IPMP
routing tables
tracing all routes
Tracing All Routes
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