Which of the following are NOT valid IPv6 addresses?

Which of the following are NOT valid IPv6 addresses? (Choose all that apply.)

Which of the following are NOT valid IPv6 addresses? (Choose all that apply.)

A.
225.1.4.2

B.
::FFFF:10.2.4.1

C.
::

D.
2001:0:42:3:ff::1

E.
fe80:2030:31:24

F.
2001:42:4:0:0:1:34:0

G.
2003:dead:bef:4dad:ab33:46:abab:62

Explanation:
The addresses 255.1.4.2 and fe80:2030:31:24 are not valid IPv6 addresses.
225.1.4.2 is incorrect because it is an IPv4 multicast address. The address fe80:2030:31:24 is incorrect because it does not represent a 16-byte IPv6 address, with
colons separating each 2-byte segment.

IPv6 addresses are 16 bytes, or 128 bits in length. The following are valid IPv6 addresses.
::FFFF:10.2.4.1 is an example of an IPv4-compatible IPv6 address, where the first 10 bytes (80 bits) of the address are set to 0 the next 2 bytes (16 bits) are set
to FFFF and the last 32 bits are the IPv4 address
:: is the IPv6 “unspecified address.” It is a unicast address not assigned to any interface, and is used by a DHCP-dependent host prior to allocating a real IPv6
address.
2001:0:42:3:ff::1 is a valid IP address, with the :: representing two segments (4 bytes) of compressed zeros.
2001:42:4:0:0:1:34:0 is a valid IP address, with only the leading zeros of each segment truncated.
2003:dead:beef:4dad:ab33:46:abab:62 has 16 bytes, is divided correctly by colons into eight sections, utilizes the dropping of leading zeros in each section
correctly, and uses the letters a-f in the three section that spell out dead beef 4 dad.
Objective:
Network Fundamentals
Sub-Objective:
Compare and contrast IPv6 address types

Cisco > Technology Support > IP > IPv6 > Technology Information > Technology White Paper > IPv6 Addressing At A Glance (PDF)
Cisco > Internetworking Technology Handbook > IPv6



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