IPv6 Neighbor Discovery 
 
   
	 The Neighbor Discovery feature for IPv6 uses
			IPv6 ICMP messages to perform the following tasks: 
 
	  
		-  Determine the link-layer address of a neighbor on the same link. 
		
-  Verify that a neighbor is reachable. 
		
-  Track neighbor routers. 
		
 An IPv6 host is required to listen for and recognize the following addresses that identify itself: 
	 
 
	  
		-  Link-local address. 
		
-  Assigned unicast address. 
		
-  Loopback address. 
		
-  All-nodes multicast address. 
		
-  Solicited-node multicast address. 
		
-  Multicast address to all other groups to which it belongs. 
		
 You can adjust the following IPv6 Neighbor
			Discovery features: 
 
	  
		-  Neighbor solicitation messages for duplicate address detection. 
		
-  Router advertisement messages: 
					-  Interval between router
						advertisement messages. 
-  Value that indicates a
						router is advertised as a default router (for use by all nodes on a link). 
-  Prefixes advertised in
						router advertisement messages. 
-  Flags for host stateful
						autoconfiguration. 
  Note     For all solicitation and advertisement messages, SLX-OS uses seconds as the
					unit of measure instead of milliseconds.  
- Amount of time during which an IPv6 node
				considers a remote node reachable (for use by all nodes on a given link). 
- The interval after which the IPv6 Neighbor Discovery
				cache is deleted or refreshed. 

Note   
Neighbor Discovery is not supported on tunnel interfaces.