In an environment that is based on vSphere 6.0 and later, nodes and features can communicate over IPv6 transparently supporting static and automatic address configuration.
IPv6 in the Communication between vSphere Nodes
The nodes in a vSphere deployment can communicate using IPv6 and accept assigned addresses according to the network configuration.
Connection Type | IPv6 Support | Address Configuration of vSphere nodes |
---|---|---|
ESXi to ESXi | Yes |
|
vCenter Server machine to ESXi | Yes |
|
vCenter Server machine to machine | Yes |
|
ESXi to vSphere Client machine | Yes |
|
Virtual machine to virtual machine | Yes |
|
ESXi to iSCSI Storage | Yes |
|
ESXi to NFS Storage | Yes |
|
ESXi to Active Directory | No Use LDAP through vCenter Server to connect ESXi to the Active Directory database |
- |
vCenter Server to Active Directory | No Use LDAP to connect vCenter Server to the Active Directory database |
- |
IPv6 Connectivity of vSphere Features
Certain vSphere features do not support IPv6:
- vSphere DPM over Intelligent Platform Management Interface (IPMI) and Hewlett-Packard Integrated Lights-Out (iLO). vSphere 6.5 and later supports only Wake-On-LAN (WOL) to bring a host out of standby mode.
- Authentication Proxy
- vSphere Management Assistant and ESXCLI connected to Active Directory.
Use LDAP to connect the vSphere Management Assistant or the ESXCLI to the Active Directory database.
IPv6 Connectivity of Virtual Machines
Virtual machines can exchange data in the network over IPv6. vSphere supports both static and automatic assignment of IPv6 addresses for virtual machines.
Configuring one or more IPv6 addresses is also possible when you customize the guest operating system of a virtual machine.
vSAN Connectivity
vSAN supports IPv6. Use NFS 4.1 with AUTH_SYS.
FQDNs and IPv6 Addresses
In vSphere, you should use fully qualified domain names (FQDNs) that are mapped to IPv6 addresses on the DNS server. You can use IPv6 addresses if they have a valid FQDN on the DNS server for reverse lookup.
To deploy vCenter Server in a pure IPv6 environment, you must use FQDNs only.