goodarticlelist.com goodarticlelist.com
  Main :> About Us :> Place Your Link :> Security & Privacy :> Terms & Conditions :> Submit Article
Search:   
 

Website Sales: Using Direct Response Secret To Get Your Prospects To Buy - Now

I'd like to let you in on a little secret that most webmasters don't know: - I-key Benney
 

Improve Search Engine Rank--Top Tips and Techniques for Webmasters

Various techniques are used by Specialists and Webmasters to Improve Search Engine Rank. This is bec ... - Kanaga Siva
 

Tips to Add Credibility to Your Web Directory Listings

Quality backlinks add value to search engine rankings; however each website directory has rules that ... - Jim Degerstrom
 
 

SEO Consultants Choosing Keywords Search Terms for Optimization of your Web Site and Pages

Choosing keywords is one of the most important things when optimizing a website. Put yourself into t ... - Billy Horner
 

Affiliate + Blogs = Money

Do you blog? Are you a struggling affiliate? Here are my Top 10 Tips for combining the two. - Melody Ralls
 

Online Paid Surveys - Why They Are A Win-Win Deal

My first trip to Europe required extra cash; I was in college and making meager wages working a 30/h ... - Diane Parker
 

Google Site Search - More Traffic & Potential Soul Loss

Question. - Silvia Hartmann
 

Create Laser Targeted Traffic to Your Online Home Based Business With These 7 Traffic Builders

If you are only looking at Search Engines too send Visitors to your Online Home Based Business Web S ... - Mike Makler
 
 

Main –› Internet & Computers –› Computer Certification
 

Cisco CCNP / BSCI Exam Tutorial: A Guide To Ipv6 Addressing

 
Author: Chris Bryant
 

Learning IPv6 is paramount in your efforts to pass the BSCI exam and go on to earn your CCNP, and it's going to help in your real-world networking career as well. IPv6 can be confusing at first, but it's like anything else in Cisco or networking as a whole - learn one part at a time, master the fundamentals, and you're on your way to success. In today's article we're going to take a look at IPv6 address types.

In IPv4, a unicast address is simply an address used to represent a single host, where multicast addresses represent a group of hosts and broadcasts represent all hosts.

In IPv6, it's not quite that simple. There are actually different types of unicast addresses, each with its own separate function. This allows IPv6 to get data where it's supposed to go quicker than IPv4 while conserving router resources.

IPv6 offers two kinds of local addresses, link-local and site-local. Site-local addresses allow devices in the same organization, or site, to exchange data. Site-local addresses are IPv6's equivalent to IPv4's private address classes, since hosts using them are able to communicate with each other throughout the organization, but these addresses cannot be used to reach Internet hosts.

Site-local and link-local addresses are actually derived from a host's MAC address. Therefore, if HostA has HostB's IPv6 address, HostA can determine HostB's MAC address from that, making ARP unnecessary.

Link-local addresses have a smaller scope than site-local. Link-local addresses are just that, local to a physical link. These particular addresses are not used at all in forwarding data. One use for these addresses is Neighbor Discovery, which is IPv6's answer to ARP.

You can identify these and other IPv6 addresses by their initial bits:

001 - Global address

(first 96 bits set to zero) - IPv4-compatible address

1111 1111 Multicast

1111 1110 11 - Site local

1111 1110 10 - Link Local

As a future CCNP, you're more than familiar with the reserved IPv4 address classes. You also know that they're not exactly contiguous. The developers of IPv6 took a structured approach to IPv6 reserved addresses - any address that begins with "0000 0000" is an IPv6 reserved address. One of these is the IPv6 loopback address, and this will give you some practice with your zero compression!

IP v6 Loopback: 0000:0000:0000:0000:0000:0000:0000:0001

Using Leading Zero Compression Only: 0:0:0:0:0:0:0:1

Combining Leading Zero and Zero Compression: ::1

Zero compression looks pretty good now, doesn't it? You just have to get used to it and keep the rules in mind. You can use all the leading zero compression you want, but zero compression ("double-colon") can only be used once in a single address.

IPv6 is here to stay, not only on your BSCI and CCNP exams, but in the real world as well. Learning it now will not only aid you in passing your Cisco exams, but in supporting IPv6 in the future.

 
 
 

Related Articles

 
Internet Marketing Tips On Getting Your Web Site Spidered Quickly
 
My First Online Business, Travel Plan Online.Com
 
Double Profits With Same Website Traffic
 
Go Flock Yourself - A Brief Look At The Flock Browser
 
Increase Your Website Sales Instantly
 
Cool Software To Know About
 
100 Free Directory Submission Links
 
Are You Having A Hard Time Getting Traffic To Your New Website?
 
How To Select Online Cash Paid Survey Sites
 
Cisco CCNP / BSCI Exam Tutorial: A Guide To Ipv6 Addressing
 
 
 
Free 3 way links
 

Jobs & Careers

Health & Hygiene

Finance & Banking

Politics & Government

Online & Board Games

Self Enhancement

Academics & Learning

Shopping & Auction

Lifestyle & Fashion

Internet & Computers

Children

Art & Culture

Business & Services

Vehicles & Automotive

News & Media

Realty & Property

Cooking & Drinking

Research & Science

Travel & Accommodation

Medicine & Treatment

Adventure & Sports

Home & Garden

People & Society

Recreation & Entertainment

 
   Main :> Security & Privacy :> Terms & Conditions
Copyright © 2006-2008 www.goodarticlelist.com - All Rights Reserved.