4.4.3.5 Lab - Configuring Basic EIGRP For IPv6 PDF
4.4.3.5 Lab - Configuring Basic EIGRP For IPv6 PDF
4.4.3.5 Lab - Configuring Basic EIGRP For IPv6 PDF
Page 1 of 9
Lab - Configuring Basic EIGRP for IPv6
Topology
2014 Cisco and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved. This document is Cisco Public. Page 1 of 9
Lab - Configuring Basic EIGRP for IPv6
Topology
2014 Cisco and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved. This document is Cisco Public. Page 1 of 9
Lab - Configuring Basic EIGRP for IPv6
Topology
Lab - Configuring Basic EIGRP for IPv6
2014 Cisco and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved. This document is Cisco Public. Page 2 of 9
Addressing Table
Device Interface IP Address Default Gateway
R1 G0/0
2001:DB8:ACAD:A::1/64
FE80::1 link-local N/A
S0/0/0 (DCE)
2001:DB8:ACAD:12::1/64
FE80::1 link-local N/A
S0/0/1
2001:DB8:ACAD:13::1/64
FE80::1 link-local N/A
R2 G0/0
2001:DB8:ACAD:B::1/64
FE80::2 link-local N/A
S0/0/0
2001:DB8:ACAD:12::2/64
FE80::2 link-local N/A
S0/0/1 (DCE)
2001:DB8:ACAD:23::2/64
FE80::2 link-local N/A
R3 G0/0
2001:DB8:ACAD:C::1/64
FE80::3 link-local N/A
S0/0/0 (DCE)
2001:DB8:ACAD:13::3/64
FE80::3 link-local N/A
S0/0/1
2001:DB8:ACAD:23::3/64
FE80::3 link-local N/A
PC-A NIC 2001:DB8:ACAD:A::3/64 FE80::1
PC-B NIC 2001:DB8:ACAD:B::3/64 FE80::2
PC-C NIC 2001:DB8:ACAD:C::3/64 FE80::3
Objectives
Part 1: Build the Network and Verify Connectivity
Part 2: Configure EIGRP for IPv6 Routing
Part 3: Verify EIGRP for IPv6 Routing
Part 4: Configure and Verify Passive Interfaces
Background / Scenario
EIGRP for IPv6 has the same overall operation and features as EIGRP for IPv4. However, there are a few
major differences between them:
EIGRP for IPv6 is configured directly on the router interfaces.
With EIGRP for IPv6, a router ID is required on each router or the routing process does not start.
The EIGRP for IPv6 routing process uses a shutdown feature.
Lab - Configuring Basic EIGRP for IPv6
2014 Cisco and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved. This document is Cisco Public. Page 3 of 9
In this lab, you will configure the network with EIGRP routing for IPv6. You will also assign router IDs,
configure passive interfaces, verify the network is fully converged, and display routing information using CLI
show commands.
Note: The routers used with CCNA hands-on labs are Cisco 1941 Integrated Services Routers (ISRs) with
Cisco IOS Release 15.2(4)M3 (universalk9 image). Other routers and Cisco IOS versions can be used.
Depending on the model and Cisco IOS version, the commands available and output produced might vary
from what is shown in the labs. Refer to the Router Interface Summary Table at the end of this lab for the
correct interface identifiers.
Note: Make sure that the routers have been erased and have no startup configurations. If you are unsure,
contact your instructor.
Required Resources
3 Routers (Cisco 1941 with Cisco IOS Release 15.2(4)M3 universal image or comparable)
3 PCs (Windows 7, Vista, or XP with terminal emulation program, such as Tera Term)
Console cables to configure the Cisco IOS devices via the console ports
Ethernet and serial cables as shown in the topology
Part 1: Build the Network and Verify Connectivity
In Part 1, you will set up the network topology and configure basic settings, such as the interface IP
addresses, device access, and passwords.
Step 1: Cable the network as shown in the topology.
Step 2: Configure PC hosts.
Step 3: Initialize and reload the routers as necessary.
Step 4: Configure basic settings for each router.
a. Disable DNS lookup.
b. Configure IP addresses for the routers as listed in Addressing Table.
Note: Configure the FE80::x link-local address and the unicast address for each router interface.
c. Configure the device name as shown in the topology.
d. Assign cisco as the console and vty passwords.
e. Assign class as the privileged EXEC password.
f. Configure logging synchronous to prevent console and vty messages from interrupting command entry.
g. Configure a message of the day.
h. Copy the running configuration to the startup configuration.
Step 5: Verify connectivity.
The routers should be able to ping one another, and each PC should be able to ping its default gateway. The
PCs will not be able to ping other PCs until EIGRP routing is configured. Verify and troubleshoot if necessary.
Lab - Configuring Basic EIGRP for IPv6
2014 Cisco and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved. This document is Cisco Public. Page 4 of 9
Part 2: Configure EIGRP for IPv6 Routing
Step 1: Enable IPv6 routing on the routers.
R1(config)# ipv6 unicast-routing
Step 2: Assign a router ID to each router.
a. To begin the EIGRP for IPv6 routing configuration process, issue the ipv6 router eigrp 1 command,
where 1 is the AS number.
R1(config)# ipv6 router eigrp 1
b. EIGRP for IPv6 requires a 32-bit address for the router ID. Use the router-id command to configure the
router ID in the router configuration mode.
R1(config)# ipv6 router eigrp 1
R1(config-rtr)# eigrp router-id 1.1.1.1
R2(config)# ipv6 router eigrp 1
R2(config-rtr)# eigrp router-id 2.2.2.2
R3(config)# ipv6 router eigrp 1
R3(config-rtr)# eigrp router-id 3.3.3.3
Step 3: Enable EIGRP for IPv6 routing on each router.
The IPv6 routing process is shut down by default. Issue the no shutdown command to enable EIGRP for
IPv6 routing on all routers.
R1(config)# ipv6 router eigrp 1
R1(config-rtr)# no shutdown
R2(config)# ipv6 router eigrp 1
R2(config-rtr)# no shutdown
R3(config)# ipv6 router eigrp 1
R3(config-rtr)# no shutdown
Step 4: Configure EIGRP for IPv6 using AS 1 on the Serial and Gigabit Ethernet interfaces on
the routers.
a. Issue the ipv6 eigrp 1 command on the interfaces that participate in the EIGRP routing process. The AS
number is 1 as assigned in Step 2. The configuration for R1 is displayed below as an example.
R1(config)# interface g0/0
R1(config-if)# ipv6 eigrp 1
R1(config-if)# interface s0/0/0
R1(config-if)# ipv6 eigrp 1
R1(config-if)# interface s0/0/1
R1(config-if)# ipv6 eigrp 1
Lab - Configuring Basic EIGRP for IPv6
2014 Cisco and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved. This document is Cisco Public. Page 5 of 9
b. Assign EIGRP participating interfaces on R2 and R3. You will see neighbor adjacency messages as
interfaces are added to the EIGRP routing process. The messages on R1 are displayed below as an
example.
R1(config-if)#
*Apr 12 00:25:49.183: %DUAL-5-NBRCHANGE: EIGRP-IPv6 1: Neighbor FE80::2 (Serial0/0/0)
is up: new adjacency
*Apr 12 00:26:15.583: %DUAL-5-NBRCHANGE: EIGRP-IPv6 1: Neighbor FE80::3 (Serial0/0/1)
is up: new adjacency
What address is used to indicate the neighbor in the adjacency messages? _____________________
Step 5: Verify end-to-end connectivity.
Part 3: Verify EIGRP for IPv6 Routing
Step 1: Examine the neighbor adjacencies.
On R1, issue the show ipv6 eigrp neighbors command to verify that the adjacency has been established
with its neighboring routers. The link-local addresses of the neighboring routers are displayed in the
adjacency table.
R1# show ipv6 eigrp neighbors
EIGRP-IPv6 Neighbors for AS(1)
H Address Interface Hold Uptime SRTT RTO Q Seq
(sec) (ms) Cnt Num
1 Link-local address: Se0/0/1 13 00:02:42 1 100 0 7
FE80::3
0 Link-local address: Se0/0/0 13 00:03:09 12 100 0 9
FE80::2
Step 2: Examine the IPv6 EIGRP routing table.
Use the show ipv6 route eigrp command to display IPv6 specific EIGRP routes on all the routers.
R1# show ipv6 route eigrp
IPv6 Routing Table - default - 10 entries
Codes: C - Connected, L - Local, S - Static, U - Per-user Static route
B - BGP, R - RIP, I1 - ISIS L1, I2 - ISIS L2
IA - ISIS interarea, IS - ISIS summary, D - EIGRP, EX - EIGRP external
ND - ND Default, NDp - ND Prefix, DCE - Destination, NDr - Redirect
O - OSPF Intra, OI - OSPF Inter, OE1 - OSPF ext 1, OE2 - OSPF ext 2
ON1 - OSPF NSSA ext 1, ON2 - OSPF NSSA ext 2
D 2001:DB8:ACAD:B::/64 [90/2172416]
via FE80::2, Serial0/0/0
D 2001:DB8:ACAD:C::/64 [90/2172416]
via FE80::3, Serial0/0/1
D 2001:DB8:ACAD:23::/64 [90/2681856]
via FE80::2, Serial0/0/0
via FE80::3, Serial0/0/1
Step 3: Examine the EIGRP topology.
R1# show ipv6 eigrp topology
Lab - Configuring Basic EIGRP for IPv6
2014 Cisco and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved. This document is Cisco Public. Page 6 of 9
EIGRP-IPv6 Topology Table for AS(1)/ID(1.1.1.1)
Codes: P - Passive, A - Active, U - Update, Q - Query, R - Reply,
r - reply Status, s - sia Status
P 2001:DB8:ACAD:A::/64, 1 successors, FD is 28160
via Connected, GigabitEthernet0/0
P 2001:DB8:ACAD:C::/64, 1 successors, FD is 2172416
via FE80::3 (2172416/28160), Serial0/0/1
P 2001:DB8:ACAD:12::/64, 1 successors, FD is 2169856
via Connected, Serial0/0/0
P 2001:DB8:ACAD:B::/64, 1 successors, FD is 2172416
via FE80::2 (2172416/28160), Serial0/0/0
P 2001:DB8:ACAD:23::/64, 2 successors, FD is 2681856
via FE80::2 (2681856/2169856), Serial0/0/0
via FE80::3 (2681856/2169856), Serial0/0/1
P 2001:DB8:ACAD:13::/64, 1 successors, FD is 2169856
via Connected, Serial0/0/1
Compare the highlighted entries to the routing table. What can you conclude from the comparison?
______________________________________________________________________________________
______________________________________________________________________________________
______________________________________________________________________________________
Step 4: Verify the parameters and current state of the active IPv6 routing protocol processes.
Issue the show ipv6 protocols command to verify the configured parameter. From the output, EIGRP is the
configured IPv6 routing protocol with 1.1.1.1 as the router ID for R1. This routing protocol is associated with
autonomous system 1 with three active interfaces: G0/0, S0/0/0, and S0/0/1.
R1# show ipv6 protocols
IPv6 Routing Protocol is "connected"
IPv6 Routing Protocol is "ND"
IPv6 Routing Protocol is "eigrp 1"
EIGRP-IPv6 Protocol for AS(1)
Metric weight K1=1, K2=0, K3=1, K4=0, K5=0
NSF-aware route hold timer is 240
Router-ID: 1.1.1.1
Topology : 0 (base)
Active Timer: 3 min
Distance: internal 90 external 170
Maximum path: 16
Maximum hopcount 100
Maximum metric variance 1
Interfaces:
GigabitEthernet0/0
Serial0/0/0
Serial0/0/1
Redistribution:
None
Lab - Configuring Basic EIGRP for IPv6
2014 Cisco and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved. This document is Cisco Public. Page 7 of 9
Part 4: Configure and Verify Passive Interfaces
A passive interface does not allow outgoing and incoming routing updates over the configured interface. The
passive-interface interface command causes the router to stop sending and receiving Hello packets over an
interface.
Step 1: Configure interface G0/0 as passive on R1 and R2.
R1(config)# ipv6 router eigrp 1
R1(config-rtr)# passive-interface g0/0
R2(config)# ipv6 router eigrp 1
R2(config-rtr)# passive-interface g0/0
Step 2: Verify the passive interface configuration.
Issue the show ipv6 protocols command on R1 and verify that G0/0 has been configured as passive.
R1# show ipv6 protocols
IPv6 Routing Protocol is "connected"
IPv6 Routing Protocol is "ND"
IPv6 Routing Protocol is "eigrp 1"
EIGRP-IPv6 Protocol for AS(1)
Metric weight K1=1, K2=0, K3=1, K4=0, K5=0
NSF-aware route hold timer is 240
Router-ID: 1.1.1.1
Topology : 0 (base)
Active Timer: 3 min
Distance: internal 90 external 170
Maximum path: 16
Maximum hopcount 100
Maximum metric variance 1
Interfaces:
Serial0/0/0
Serial0/0/1
GigabitEthernet0/0 (passive)
Redistribution:
None
Step 3: Configure the G0/0 passive interface on R3.
If a few interfaces are configured as passive, use the passive-interface default command to configure all the
interfaces on the router as passive. Use the no passive-interface interface command to allow EIGRP Hello
messages in and out of the router interface.
a. Configure all interfaces as passive on R3.
R3(config)# ipv6 router eigrp 1
R3(config-rtr)# passive-interface default
R3(config-rtr)#
*Apr 13 00:07:03.267: %DUAL-5-NBRCHANGE: EIGRP-IPv6 1: Neighbor FE80::1 (Serial0/0/0)
is down: interface passive
Lab - Configuring Basic EIGRP for IPv6
2014 Cisco and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved. This document is Cisco Public. Page 8 of 9
*Apr 13 00:07:03.267: %DUAL-5-NBRCHANGE: EIGRP-IPv6 1: Neighbor FE80::2 (Serial0/0/1)
is down: interface passive
b. After you have issued the passive-interface default command, R3 no longer participates in the routing
process. What command can you use to verify it?
____________________________________________________________________________________
c. What command can you use to display the passive interfaces on R3?
____________________________________________________________________________________
d. Configure the serial interfaces to participate in the routing process.
R3(config)# ipv6 router eigrp 1
R3(config-rtr)# no passive-interface s0/0/0
R3(config-rtr)# no passive-interface s0/0/1
R3(config-rtr)#
*Apr 13 00:21:23.807: %DUAL-5-NBRCHANGE: EIGRP-IPv6 1: Neighbor FE80::1 (Serial0/0/0)
is up: new adjacency
*Apr 13 00:21:25.567: %DUAL-5-NBRCHANGE: EIGRP-IPv6 1: Neighbor FE80::2 (Serial0/0/1)
is up: new adjacency
e. The neighbor relationships have been established again with R1 and R2. Verify that only G0/0 has been
configured as passive. What command do you use to verify the passive interface?
____________________________________________________________________________________
Reflection
1. Where would you configure passive interfaces? Why?
_______________________________________________________________________________________
_______________________________________________________________________________________
_______________________________________________________________________________________
2. What are some advantages with using EIGRP as the routing protocol in your network?
_______________________________________________________________________________________
_______________________________________________________________________________________
_______________________________________________________________________________________
Lab - Configuring Basic EIGRP for IPv6
2014 Cisco and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved. This document is Cisco Public. Page 9 of 9
Router Interface Summary Table
Router Interface Summary
Router Model Ethernet Interface #1 Ethernet Interface #2 Serial Interface #1 Serial Interface #2
1800 Fast Ethernet 0/0
(F0/0)
Fast Ethernet 0/1
(F0/1)
Serial 0/0/0 (S0/0/0) Serial 0/0/1 (S0/0/1)
1900 Gigabit Ethernet 0/0
(G0/0)
Gigabit Ethernet 0/1
(G0/1)
Serial 0/0/0 (S0/0/0) Serial 0/0/1 (S0/0/1)
2801 Fast Ethernet 0/0
(F0/0)
Fast Ethernet 0/1
(F0/1)
Serial 0/1/0 (S0/1/0) Serial 0/1/1 (S0/1/1)
2811 Fast Ethernet 0/0
(F0/0)
Fast Ethernet 0/1
(F0/1)
Serial 0/0/0 (S0/0/0) Serial 0/0/1 (S0/0/1)
2900 Gigabit Ethernet 0/0
(G0/0)
Gigabit Ethernet 0/1
(G0/1)
Serial 0/0/0 (S0/0/0) Serial 0/0/1 (S0/0/1)
Note: To find out how the router is configured, look at the interfaces to identify the type of router and how many
interfaces the router has. There is no way to effectively list all the combinations of configurations for each router
class. This table includes identifiers for the possible combinations of Ethernet and Serial interfaces in the device.
The table does not include any other type of interface, even though a specific router may contain one. An
example of this might be an ISDN BRI interface. The string in parenthesis is the legal abbreviation that can be
used in Cisco IOS commands to represent the interface.