IPv6 hosts can configure themselves automatically when connected to an IPv6 network using the neighbor discovery (ND) protocol via ICMPv6 router discovery messages. These hosts require firewall packet protection unique to IPv6 traffic, as IPv6 addresses are composed of eight groups of four hexadecimal digits separated by colons. When first connected to a network, a host sends a link-local router solicitation multicast request for its configuration parameters; routers respond to such a request with a router advertisement packet that contains Internet Layer configuration parameters.
To define a firewall policy IPv6 settings:
The IPv6 firewall provides support to IPv6 packet streams. This setting is selected by default. Deactivating IPv6 firewall support also deactivates proxy neighbor discovery.
A flow is a sequence of packets from a particular source to a particular (unicast or multicast) destination. The flow label helps keep packet streams from looking like one massive flow. Flow label rewrites are not selected by default.
Flow label re-writes enable the re-classification of packets belonging to a specific flow. The flow label does nothing to eliminate the need for packet filtering.
When selected, any IPv6 packet received on an interface is parsed to see whether it is known to be a neighbor solicitation. This setting is selected by default.
Setting | Description |
---|---|
Event | Lists the name of each IPv6 specific event subject to logging |
Enable | Select Enable to set the firewall policy to filter the associated IPv6 event based on the selection in the Action column |
Action | If a filter is selected, chose an action from the
drop-down list box to determine how the firewall treats the
associated IPv6 event
|
Log Level | Select Log Level and then select a standard log level from the Log Level drop-down list box |
Info | Additional information about IPv6 settings |