For
Interface ID, enter the 64-bit extended
unique identifier (EUI-64) in hexadecimal format (for example,
00:26:08:FF:FE:DE:4E:29). If you leave this field blank, the firewall
uses the EUI-64 generated from the MAC address of the physical
interface. If you enable the
Use interface ID as host
portion option when adding an address, the firewall uses
the Interface ID as the host portion of that address.
Select
Address Assignment and
Add the IPv6
Address
or select an address group.
Select
Enable address on interface to enable
this IPv6 address on the interface.
Select
Use interface ID as host portion to use
the Interface ID as the host portion of the IPv6 address.
(
Optional) Select
Anycast to make the
IPv6 address (route) an Anycast address (route), which means multiple
locations can advertise the same prefix, and IPv6 sends the anycast
traffic to the node it considers the nearest, based on routing protocol
costs and other factors.
(
Ethernet interface only) Select
Send Router
Advertisement (RA) to enable the firewall to send this
address in Router Advertisements, in which case you must also enable the
global
Enable Router Advertisement option on the
interface (next step).
(
Ethernet interface only) Enter the
Valid Lifetime
(sec), in seconds, that the firewall considers the
address valid. The Valid Lifetime must equal or exceed the
Preferred Lifetime (sec) (default is
2,592,000).
(
Ethernet interface only) Enter the
Preferred
Lifetime (sec) (in seconds) that the valid address is
preferred, which means the firewall can use it to send and receive
traffic. After the Preferred Lifetime expires, the firewall can’t use
the address to establish new connections, but any existing connections
are valid until the
Valid Lifetime expires
(default is 604,800).
(
Ethernet interface only) Select
On-link if systems that have addresses within
the prefix are reachable without a router.
(
Ethernet interface only) Select
Autonomous if systems can independently
create an IP address by combining the advertised prefix with an
Interface ID.
Click
OK.
For a static IPv6 interface, configure address resolution.
Select
Address Resolution.
Enable Duplicate Address Detection (DAD) if you
want the uniqueness of a potential IPv6 address to be verified before it
is assigned to the interface (default is enabled).
If you selected
Enable Duplicate Address
Detection, specify the number of
DAD
Attempts within the neighbor solicitation (NS) interval
before the attempt to identify neighbors fails; range is 0 to 10;
default is 1.
Enter the
Reachable Time (sec), the length of
time that the client assumes a neighbor is reachable after receiving a
Reachability Confirmation message; range is 10 to 36,000; default is
30.
Enter the
NS Interval (sec) (Neighbor
Solicitation interval), the length of time between Neighbor
Solicitations; range is 1 to 3,600; default is 1.
Enable NDP Monitoring to enable Neighbor
Discovery Protocol monitoring. When enabled, you can select the NDP icon
(
in the Features
column) and view information such as the IPv6 address of a neighbor the
firewall has discovered, the corresponding MAC address, User-ID, and
status (on a best-case basis).
Click
OK.
(
Ethernet or VLAN interface using IPv6 address only) Enable the
firewall to send IPv6 Router Advertisements (RAs) from an interface, and
optionally tune RA parameters.
Tune RA parameters for either of these reasons: To interoperate with a
router/host that uses different values. To achieve fast convergence when
multiple gateways are present. For example, set lower Min
Interval, Max Interval, and
Router Lifetime values so the IPv6
client/host can quickly change the default gateway after the primary
gateway fails, and start forwarding to another default gateway in the
network.
Select and
Ethernet or
VLAN.
Select the interface you want to configure.
Select
IPv6.
Select
Enable IPv6 on the interface.
On the
Router Advertisement tab, select
Enable Router Advertisement (default is
disabled).
(
Optional) Set
Min Interval (sec), the
minimum interval, in seconds, between RAs the firewall sends (range is 3
to 1,350; default is 200). The firewall sends RAs at random intervals
between the minimum and maximum values you set.
(
Optional) Set
Max Interval (sec), the
maximum interval, in seconds, between RAs the firewall sends (range is 4
to 1,800; default is 600). The firewall sends RAs at random intervals
between the minimum and maximum values you set.
(
Optional) Set
Hop Limit to apply to
clients for outgoing packets (range is 1 to 255; default is 64). Enter 0
for no hop limit.
(
Optional) Set
Link MTU, the link
maximum transmission unit (MTU) to apply to clients (range is 1,280 to
1,500; default is
unspecified). Select
unspecified for no link MTU.
(
Optional) Set
Reachable Time (ms), the
reachable time, in milliseconds, that the client will use to assume a
neighbor is reachable after receiving a Reachability Confirmation
message. Select
unspecified for no reachable time
value (range is 0 to 3,600,000; default is
unspecified).
(
Optional) Set
Retrans Time (ms), the
retransmission timer that determines how long the client will wait, in
milliseconds, before retransmitting Neighbor Solicitation messages.
Select
unspecified for no retransmission time
(range is 0 to 4,294,967,295; default is
unspecified).
(
Optional) Set
Router Lifetime (sec) to
specify how long, in seconds, the client will use the firewall as the
default gateway (range is 0 to 9,000; default is 1,800). Zero specifies
that the firewall is not the default gateway. When the lifetime expires,
the client removes the firewall entry from its Default Router List and
uses another router as the default gateway.
Set
Router Preference, which the client uses to
select a preferred router if the network segment has multiple IPv6
routers.
High,
Medium
(default), or
Low is the priority that the RA
advertises indicating the relative priority of firewall virtual router
relative to other routers on the segment.
Select
Managed Configuration to indicate to the
client that addresses are available via DHCPv6.
Select
Other Configuration to indicate to the
client that other address information (such as DNS-related settings) is
available via DHCPv6.
Select
Consistency Check to have the firewall
verify that RAs sent from other routers are advertising consistent
information on the link. The firewall logs any inconsistencies.
Click
OK.
(
Ethernet or VLAN interface using IPv6 address only) Specify the
Recursive DNS Server addresses and DNS Search List the firewall will advertise
in ND Router Advertisements from this interface.
The RDNS servers and DNS Search List are part of the DNS configuration for
the DNS client so that the client can resolve IPv6 DNS requests.
You must have selected Enable Router Advertisement
on the Router Advertisement tab to make the DNS
Support tab available.
Select and
Ethernet or
VLAN.
Select the interface you are configuring.
Select .
Include DNS information in Router Advertisement
to enable the firewall to send IPv6 DNS information.
For DNS
Server,
Add the
IPv6 address of a Recursive DNS Server (adding up to eight servers). The
firewall sends server addresses in an ICMPv6 Router Advertisement in
order from top to bottom.
Specify the
Lifetime in seconds, which is the
maximum length of time the client can use the specific RDNS Server to
resolve domain names.
Add a
Domain Search List
(domain name of a maximum of 255 bytes). Add up to eight entries. The
firewall sends domains in an ICMPv6 Router Advertisement in order from
top to bottom.
Specify the
Lifetime in seconds, which is the
maximum length of time the client can use the list. The Lifetime has the
same range and default value as the
Server.
Click
OK.
(
Ethernet or VLAN interface) Specify static ARP entries. Static ARP
entries reduce ARP processing.
Select and
Ethernet or
VLAN.
Select the interface you are configuring.
Select .
Add an
IP Address and its
corresponding
MAC Address (hardware or media
access control address). For a VLAN interface, you must also select the
Interface.
Click
OK.
(
Ethernet or VLAN interface) Specify static Neighbor Discovery
Protocol (NDP) entries. NDP for IPv6 performs functions similar to those
provided by ARP for IPv4.
Select and
Ethernet or
VLAN.
Select the interface you are configuring.
Select .
Add an
IPv6 Address and
its corresponding
MAC Address.
Click
OK.
(
Optional) Enable services on the interface.
To enable services on the interface, select and
Ethernet or
VLAN.
Select the interface you are configuring.
Select .
Expand the
Management Profile list and select a
profile or
New Management Profile.
Enter a
Name for the profile.
For
Permitted Services, select services, such as
Ping, and click
OK.
Commit your changes.
Cable the interface.
Attach straight-through cables from interfaces you configured to the
corresponding switch or router on each network segment.
Verify that the interface is active.
From the web interface, select and verify that icon in the Link State column is green. You
can also monitor link state from the Interfaces
widget on the Dashboard.
Configure static routes and/or a dynamic routing protocol so that the virtual
router or logical router can route traffic.
Configure a default route.
(
Supported firewalls only) If the interface corresponds to a PoE
(Power over Ethernet) port on the firewall, you can optionally
configure PoE.