Hardware Forwarding Limitations
  
    All switches can use hardware forwarding when the route mask is 64 bits or
      less. If the route mask is greater that 64 bits, limitations apply based on the hardware
      platform.
    This support was added in 
ExtremeXOS Release 12.4 by using some of the
      slices previously used for 
ACL support to create a Greater Than
      64 Bit (GT64B) table. The GT64B table stores only those routes with a mask greater than 64
      bits. When IPv6 forwarding is enabled, the switch behavior is as follows:
        - 
          Fewer slices are available for ACLs.  Use show access-list usage acl-slice to check if any slice is
            unused. If no slice is available, consider disabling a feature that is consuming ACL
            slices if that feature is not required. Features that are enabled by default such as
              IGMP Snooping or MLD Snooping can be disabled to free up
            ACL resources if not required. 
- Table-full messages appear when there is no more space in the GT64B
          table.
- If an eligible route cannot be added to the GT64B table (because the
          table is full), there is no guarantee that traffic for that route will be properly
          routed.
- If enabled, route compression for IPv6 can make room for additional
          routes by reducing the number of entries in the GT64B table.
- When an IPv6 address with a mask greater that 64 bits is configured
          on a VLAN or tunnel, that address is automatically added to
          the GT64B table.
All switches support hardware forwarding routes with masks
      greater than 64 bits. For number of routes supported, see the limits for the particular switch
      in the ExtremeXOS Release Notes.
    Starting with ExtremeXOS 22.5, the
        ipv6-mask-length option provides greater
      hardware route scale and IP route sharing (ECMP) support for IPv6 “long-mask routes”,
      meaning IPv6 subnets with mask lengths 65–128 bits. This provides additional scale and
      resilience for IPv6 host routes whose mask length is 128 bits. Increasing scale and providing
      ECMP for IPv6 mask 65–128 routes decreases IPv4 route scale. The default IPv6 mask length is
      64.
    The configure forwarding internal-tables [ l2-and-l3 | more [l2 | l3-and-ipmc | routes {ipv6-mask-length [64 | 128]}]] command provides the ability to support additional L2 and
      L3 hosts, routes, or multicast table entries.
    This support was added in 
ExtremeXOS Release 12.4 by using a
hardware table designed for this purpose. When IPv6 forwarding is
enabled, the switch behavior is as follows:
- If no space is available in the hardware table, there is no guarantee that
          traffic for that route will be properly routed.
- If enabled, route compression for IPv6 can make room for additional routes
          by reducing the number of entries in the hardware table.
- When an IPv6 address with a mask greater that 64 bits is configured on a
          VLAN or tunnel, that address is automatically added to the hardware table.