It's pretty simple to enable RIPng for IPv6. You configure it right on the interface where you want RIP to run with the ipv6 router rip number command.
To enable OSPFv3, you enable the protocol at the interface level as with RIPng. The command string is ipv6 ospf proces-id area area-id.
There are no broadcasts with IPv6. Unicast , multicast, anycast, global, and link - local unicast are used.
There are 16 bits (four hex characters) in an IPv6 field.
Extended service set ID means that you have more than one access point and they all are set to the same SSID and all are connected together in the same VLAN or distribution system so users can roam.
Two wireless hosts directly connected wirelessly is no different then two hosts connecting with a crossover cable. They are both ad-hoc networks, but in wireless, we call this an independent Basic Service Set(IBSS).
EIGRPv6's multicast address stayed very near the same. In IPv4 it was 224.0.0.10; now it is FF02::A (A = 10 in decimal notation)
RIPng uses the multicast IPv6 address of FF02::9. If you remember the multicast addresses for IPv4, the numbers at the end of each IPv6 address are the same.
Packets addressed to a multicast address are delivered to all interfaces identified with the multicast address, the same as in IPv4. It is also called a one-to-many address. You can always tell a multicast address in IPv6 because multicast addresses always start with FF.
The key is "there are no free ports" on your router. Only Frame Relay can provide a connection to multiple locations with one interface, and in an economical manner no less.
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