Previously, specification of IP Addresses was limited to IPv4 dotted decimal notation. With the current release, you can now specify IPv6 addresses in any IP Address field. IPv6 uses 128-bit IP addresses instead of the 32-bit addresses used by IPv4. Any policies that are based on the IP address version support IPv6 and IPv4.
You can use IPv4-mapped IPv6 addresses or the traditional IPv6 format. The IPv4-mapped IPv6 address format allows the IPv4 address of an IPv4 node to be represented as an IPv6 address as follows:
Important! IPv4-compatible IPv6 addresses in the format 0:0:0:0:0:0:d.d.d.d are now deprecated, according to RFC 4291, because the current IPv6 transition mechanisms no longer use these addresses.
The following is a valid IPv6 address written in traditional format.
2001:0db8:85a3:08d3:1319:8a2e:0370:7334
If one or more four-digit groups are 0000, the zeros can be omitted and replaced with two colons(::). Leading zeros in a group can also be omitted. The following example IP addresses are equivalent:
If you are replacing IPv4 addresses with IPv4-mapped addresses, use the following examples as guidelines:
Alternatively, you can use the following compressed form:
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