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A host on 6to4 Site A sends a transmission that specifies
as the destination a host at native IPv6 Site B. Each packet header has a
6to4-derived address as its source address. The destination address is a standard
IPv6 address.
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Site A's 6to4 router encapsulates each packet within an IPv4
header, which has the IPv4 address of the 6to4 relay router as its destination.
The 6to4 router uses standard IPv4 routing procedures to forward the packet
over the IPv4 network. Any IPv4 routers that the packets encounter forward
the packets to the 6to4 relay router.
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The physically closest anycast 6to4 relay router to Site A
retrieves the packets that are destined for the 192.88.99.1
anycast group.
Note –
6to4 relay routers that are part of the 6to4 relay router anycast
group have the IP address 192.88.99.1. This anycast address
is the default address for 6to4 relay routers. If you need to use a specific
6to4 relay router, you can override the default and specify that router's
IPv4 address.
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The relay router decapsulates the IPv4 header from the 6to4
packets, revealing the native IPv6 destination address.
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The relay router then sends the now IPv6-only packets onto
the IPv6 network, where the packets are ultimately retrieved by a router at
Site B. The router then forwards the packets to the destination IPv6 node.