End-user hosts need to know the IPv6 address of a default router, to which the host sends IPv6 packets if the host is in a different subnet.
(A) TRUE
(B) FALSE
TRUE is the correct answer. IPv6 routing looks just like IPv4 routing. IPv6 uses these ideas the same way as IPv4:
To be able to build and send IPv6 packets out an interface, end-user devices need an IPv6 address on that interface.
End-user hosts need to know the IPv6 address of a default router, to which the host sends IPv6 packets if the host is in a different subnet.
IPv6 routers de-encapsulate and re-encapsulate each IPv6 packet when routing the packet.
IPv6 routers make routing decisions by comparing the IPv6 packet’s destination address to the router’s IPv6 routing table; the matched route lists directions of where to send the IPv6
packet next.
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