When using IPv6 on a logical router interface, you can set up Stateless Address Autoconfiguration (SLAAC) for the assignment of IP addresses. SLAAC enables the addressing of a host, based on a network prefix advertised from a local network router, through router advertisements. Duplicate Address Detection (DAD) ensures the uniqueness of IP addresses.

Prerequisites

Navigate to Networking > Global Networking Settings, click the Global Gateway Config tab and select IPv4 and IPv6 as the L3 Forwarding Mode

Procedure

  1. From your browser, log in with admin privileges to an NSX Manager at https://<nsx-manager-ip-address>.
  2. Select Networking > Tier-0 Gateways.
  3. To edit a tier-0 gateway, click the menu icon (three dots) and select Edit.
  4. Click Additional Settings.
  5. To create an ND Profile (SLAAC profile), click the menu icon (three dots) and select Create New.
    1. Enter a name for the profile.
    2. Select a mode:
      • Disabled - Router advertisement messages are disabled.
      • SLAAC with DNS Through RA - The address and DNS information is generated with the router advertisement message.
      • SLAAC with DNS Through DHCP - The address is generated with the router advertisement message and the DNS information is generated by the DHCP server.
      • DHCP with Address and DNS through DHCP - The address and DNS information is generated by the DHCP server.
      • SLAAC with Address and DNS through DHCP - The address and DNS information is generated by the DHCP server. This option is only supported by NSX Edge and not by ESXi hosts.
    3. Enter the reachable time and the retransmission interval for the router advertisement message.
    4. Enter the domain name and specify a lifetime for the domain name. Enter these values only for the SLAAC with DNS Through RA mode.
    5. Enter a DNS server and specify a lifetime for the DNS server. Enter these values only for the SLAAC with DNS Through RA mode.
    6. Enter the values for router advertisement:
      • RA Interval - The interval of time between the transmission of consecutive router advertisement messages.
      • Hop Limit - The lifetime of the advertised routes.
      • Router Lifetime - The lifetime of the router.
      • Prefix Lifetime- The lifetime of the prefix in seconds.
      • Prefix Preferred Time - The time that a valid address is preferred.
  6. To create a DAD Profile, click the menu icon (three dots) and select Create New.
    1. Enter a name for the profile.
    2. Select a mode:
      • Loose - A duplicate address notification is received but no action is taken when a duplicate address is detected.
      • Strict - A duplicate address notification is received and the duplicate address is no longer used.
    3. Enter the Wait Time (seconds) that specifies the interval of time between the NS packets.
    4. Enter the NS Retries Count that specifies the number of NS packets to detect duplicate addresses at intervals defined in Wait Time (seconds)