IPv6 Drill 1

 In IPv6 Address Drills, Questions

This post gives you an exercise with five different problems. Each begins with an expanded IPv6 Global Unicast Addresses (GUA). For each problem, start by abbreviating the address. Then find the IPv6 subnet ID (aka the prefix ID), both in expanded and abbreviated form. This post has both the questions and the answers – just click the items in the post to reveal.

All about IPv6 Drills

IPv6 addresses take up a lot of space – as many as 32 hex digits. Devices help us humans by listing the abbreviated form of IPv6 addresses. However, it helps to think about IPv6 addresses in their unabbreviated (expanded) form – so you need to be skilled at mentally converting from expanded to abbreviated form.

Beyond basic address abbreviation and expansion, you need to be ready to perform other operations on IPv6 addresses, like these:

  • Find the subnet (prefix) ID based on an address (both in abbreviated and expanded form.)
  • Calculate the complete IPv6 address when using the EUI-64 process to build the address’s interface ID (IID) portion.
  • Build Link-Local Addresses (LLAs) based on the MAC address of an interface.

Background: IPv6 Address Drills

IPv6 addresses take up a lot of space – as many as 32 hex digits. Devices help us humans by listing the abbreviated form of IPv6 addresses. However, it helps to think about IPv6 addresses in their unabbreviated (expanded) form – so you need to be skilled at mentally converting from expanded to abbreviated form.

Beyond basic address abbreviation and expansion, you need to be ready to perform other operations on IPv6 addresses, like these:

  • Find the subnet (prefix) ID based on an address (both in abbreviated and expanded form.)
  • Calculate the complete IPv6 address when using the EUI-64 process to build the address’s interface ID (IID) portion.
  • Build Link-Local Addresses (LLAs) based on the MAC address of an interface.

Instructions and Problems

Each problem listed in the following table shows an expanded IPv6 Global Unicast Address (GUA). For each problem, find these values:

  1. The abbreviated version of the GUA
  2. The expanded prefix ID, assuming a /64 prefix length
  3. The abbreviated prefix ID

Question Set:

Problem # Expanded GUAs
1 2001:0db8:1234:009F:0200:defe:0002:1000
2 2001:0db8:bade:0200:1001:00a0:00b0:0000
3 3000:00ba:0000:0000:1001:00a0:00b0:0000
4 3000:00ba:0000:000a:1001:0000:0000:0000
5 2001:0db8:bade:0000:1001:0000:0000:0dad

Lab Answers Below: Spoiler Alert

Click the tabs below to see the answer to each problem.

Answers

Answer: Problem 1

Value
Expanded GUA 2001:0db8:1234:009F:0200:defe:0002:1000
Abbreviated GUA 2001:db8:1234:9F:200:defe:2:1000
Expanded Prefix 2001:0db8:1234:009F:0000:0000:0000:0000/64
Abbreviated Prefix 2001:db8:1234:9F::/64

Answer: Problem 2

Value
Expanded GUA 2001:0db8:bade:0200:1001:00a0:00b0:0000
Abbreviated GUA 2001:db8:bade:200:1001:a0:b0:0
Expanded Prefix 2001:0db8:bade:0200::/64
Abbreviated Prefix 2001:db8:bade:200::/64

Answer: Problem 3

Value
Expanded GUA 3000:00ba:0000:0000:1001:00a0:00b0:0000
Abbreviated GUA 3000:ba::1001:a0:b0:0
Expanded Prefix 3000:00ba:0000:0000:0000:0000:0000:0000/64
Abbreviated Prefix 3000:ba::/64

Answer: Problem 4

Value
Expanded GUA 3000:00ba:0000:000a:1001:0000:0000:0000
Abbreviated GUA 3000:ba:0:a:1001::
Expanded Prefix 3000:00ba:0000:000a:0000:0000:0000:0000/64
Abbreviated Prefix 3000:ba:0:a::/64

Answer: Problem 5

Value
Expanded GUA 2001:0db8:bade:0000:1001:0000:0000:0dad
Abbreviated GUA 2001:db8:bade:0:1001::dad
Expanded Prefix 2001:0db8:bade:0000:0000:0000:0000:0000
Abbreviated Prefix 2001:db8:bade::/64

 

Labs with Related Content!

CCNA Crash Course Student QA Post
IPv6 Drill 2
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thejackripper

wouldnt problem 2’s abbreviated GUA be 2001:db8:bade:200:1001:a0:b0:: instead of
2001:db8:bade:200:1001:a0:b0:0

rfc 4291 2.2.2 says:
‘The “::” can also be used to compress leading or trailing zeros in an address.’

Wendell Odom

The short answer is no, it’s only for 2 or more consecutive all 0s quartets that are correctly abbreviated to ::. See RFC 5952 section 4.2. So all the examples you asked about are correct as is.

thejackripper

thank you so much for the pointer to the RFC with clarifications…

i very much appreciate it.

Wendell Odom

You’re quite welcome, Jack.

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