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L

Lab - Vie
ewing Host
H Rou
uting Tables
T
Topology

O
Objectives
Part 1: Ac
ccess the Ho
ost Routing Table
T
Part 2: Ex
xamine IPv4 Host Routin
ng Table Entrries
Part 3: Ex
xamine IPv6 Host Routin
ng Table Entrries

B
Backgroun
nd / Scenarrio
To access s a resource on
o a network,, your host will determine tthe route to th he destinationn host using itts routing
e host routing table is similar to that of a router, but iss specific to th
table. The he local host and much lesss
complex. For a packet to reach a loc cal destinatioon, the local h ost routing taable is require
ed. To reach a remote
destinatio ocal host routing table and the router rou
on, both the lo uting table aree required. Thhe netstat rr and
route prinnt commands s provide insig
ght into how your
y local hosst routes packkets to the de estination.
In this lab
b, you will disp mine the inforrmation in the host routing table of your PC using the
play and exam e netstat
r and route print com mmands. You will determinne how packe ts will be routted by your PPC depending on the
destinatioon address.
Note: This
s lab cannot be
b completed
d using Netlab
b. This lab asssumes that yo
ou have Interrnet access.

R
Required Resources
R
1 PC (Windows 7, Vista, or XP with
w Internet and
a comman d prompt acccess)

P
Part 1: Access
A th
he Host Routing
R Table
S
Step 1: Re
ecord your PC
P informattion.
On your PC,
P open a co ommand prom
mpt window and type the ip
pconfig /all ccommand to d
display the folllowing
informatio
on and record it:

IPv4 Add
dress
MAC Add
dress
Default Gateway
G

S
Step 2: Dis
splay the ro
outing tables.
In a comm
mand prompt window type the netstat r
(or route p rint) comman
nd to display the host routiing table.

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L
Lab - Viewing
g Host Routing Tables

What are the three sec


ctions displaye
ed in the outp
put?

S
Step 3: Examine the Interface Lis
st.
The first section,
s Interfa plays the Media Access Co
ace List, disp ontrol (MAC) addresses an
nd assigned in
nterface
number of every netwo ork-capable innterface on the host.

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Lab - Viewing
g Host Routing Tables

The first column


c is the interface num
mber. The seccond column is the list of M
MAC addresse es associated
d with the
network-c capable interfa
aces on the hosts.
h These interfaces
i can
n include Ethe ernet, Wi-Fi a
and Bluetoothh
adapters. The third column shows th he manufactu
urer and a desscription of th
he interface.
In this exa
ample, the firs
st line display
ys the wireless
s interface tha
at is connecte
ed to the loca
al network.
Note: If yoou have a PC C with an Ethe
ernet interface
e and a Wirel ess adapter e
enabled, both
h interfaces w
would be
listed in th
he Interface List.
L
What is th
he MAC addre ess of the inte
erface connec
cted to your lo
ocal network?
? How does th
he MAC addrress
compare tot the recorde
ed MAC address in Step 1?

The seconnd line is loop ce. The loopback interface is automatica


pback interfac ally assigned an IP addresss of
127.0.0.1 when the Tra ansmission Control
C Protocol/Internet Prrotocol (TCP/IIP) is running
g on a host.
The last fo
our lines represent transitio
on technology
y that allows communicatio
on in a mixed
d environmentt and
includes IPv4 and IPv6 6.

P
Part 2: Examine
E IPv4
I Host Routing
g Table E
Entries
In Part 2, you will exam on as a result of the
mine the IPv4 host routing table. This ta ble is in the ssecond sectio
netstat rr output. It listts all the know
wn IPv4 route
es, including d
direct connecctions, local ne
etwork, and lo
ocal
default routes.

ut is divided in
The outpu n five columns
s: Network De
estination, Ne
etmask, Gate
eway, Interfacce, and Metricc.
The Network
N Destination column lists the rea
achable netwo
ork. The Netw
work Destinattion is used w
with
Netmask to match the destinatio
on IP addresss.
The Netmask
N lists the subnet mask
m that the host
h uses to d
determine the
e network and
d host portions of the
IP add
dress.
The Gateway
G colum
mn lists the address
a that th
he host uses to send the p packets to a re
emote network
destin
nation. If a destination is directly connec cted, the gate
eway is listed as On-link in the output.
The In
nterface colum
mn lists the IP
P address tha
at is configure
ed on the loca
al network ada
aptor. This is used to
forward a packet on
o the network k.
The Metric
M column lists the costt of using a ro
oute. It is used
d to calculate
e the best routte to a destina
ation. A
preferrred route has
s a lower mettric number th han other routtes listed.
The outpu
ut displays five different typ
pes of active routes:
r

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Lab - Viewing Host Routing Tables

The local default route 0.0.0.0 is used when the packet does not match other specified addresses in the
routing table. The packet will be sent to the gateway from the PC for further processing. In this example,
the packet will be sent to 192.168.1.1 from 192.168.1.11.
The loopback addresses, 127.0.0.0 127.255.255.255, are related to direct connection and provide
services to the local host.
The addresses for the subnet, 192.168.1.0 192.168.1.255, are all related to the host and the local
network. If the final destination of the packet is in the local network, the packet will exit 192.168.1.11
interface.
- The local route address 192.168.1.0 represents all devices on the 192.168.1.0/24 network.
- The address of the local host is 192.168.1.11.
- The network broadcast address 192.168.1.255 is used to send messages to all the hosts on the local
network.
The special multicast class D addresses 224.0.0.0 are reserved for use through either the loopback
interface (127.0.0.1) or the host (192.168.1.11).
The local broadcast address 255.255.255.255 can be used through either the loopback interface
(127.0.0.1) or host (192.168.1.11).
Based on the contents of the IPv4 routing table, if the PC wanted to send a packet to 192.168.1.15, what
would it do and where would it send the packet?

If the PC wanted to send a packet to a remote host located at 172.16.20.23, what would it do and where
would it send the packet?

Part 3: Examine IPv6 Host Routing Table Entries


In Part 3, you will examine the IPv6 routing table. This table is in the third section displayed in the netstat r
output. It lists all the known IPv6 routes including direct connections, local network and local default routes.

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Lab - Viewing
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The outpuut of the IPv6 Route Table differs in colu


umn headingss and format because the IPv6 addressses are
128 bits versus
v only 32
2 bits for IPv4
4 addresses. The
T IPv6 Rou ute Table secction displays four columnss:
The Iff column lists the interface numbers of the
t IPv6-enab
bled network interfaces fro
om the Interface List
sectio
on of the netsstat r comma and.
The Metric
M column lists the costt of each route
e to a destina
ation. The low
wer cost is the
e preferred route, and
the metric
m is used to
t select betwween multiple routes with t he same preffix.
The Network
N Destination column lists the add
dress prefix fo
or the route.
The Gateway
G lists the next-hop IPv6 addresss to reach the
e destination. On-link is listted as the nexxt-hop
addre
ess if it is direc
ctly connected to the host.
In this exa
ample, the figure displays the
t IPv6 Route Table secttion generated
d by the nets
stat r comm
mand to
reveal thee following network destina
ations:
::/0: This
T is the IPv
v6 equivalent of the local de
efault route. T
The Gatewayy column provvides the link-local
addre ess of the defaault router.
::1/12
28: This is equ
uivalent to the
e IPv4 loopba
ack address a
and provides sservices to the local host.
2001::/32: This is the cast network prefix.
t global unic
2001:0:9d38:6ab8:1863:3bca:3ff57:fef4/128: This is the glo
obal unicast IIPv6 addresss of the local ccomputer.
fe80::/64: This is th
he local link network route address and represents a
all computers on the local-link IPv6
netwoork.
fe80::1863:3bca:3ff57:fef4/128: This
T is the link-local IPv6 a
address of the
e local compu
uter.
ff00:://8: These are special reserrved multicast class D add
dresses equivvalent to the IP
Pv4 224.x.x.xx
addreesses.
The host routing table for IPv6 has similar
s inform
mation as the IIPv4 routing ttable. What iss the local deffault route
for IPv4 and what is it for
f IPv6?

What is th
he loopback address
a and subnet
s mask for
f IPv4? Wha
at is the loopb
back IP addre
ess for IPv6?

How many IPv6 addres


sses have been assigned to this PC?

How many broadcast addresses


a does the IPv6 ro
outing table ccontain?

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Lab - Viewing Host Routing Tables

Reflection
1. How is the number of bits for the network indicated for IPv4. How is it done for IPv6?

2. Why is there both IPv4 and IPv6 information in the host routing tables?

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