Link-local address

A link-local address is an Internet Protocol address that is intended only for communications within the segment of a local network (a link) or a point-to-point connection that a host is connected to. Routers do not forward packets with link-local addresses.

Link-local addresses may be assigned manually by an administrator or by operating system procedures. Most often they are assigned using stateless address autoconfiguration. In IPv4,[1] they are normally only used to assign IP addresses to network interfaces when no external, stateful mechanism of address configuration exists, such as the Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol (DHCP) or when another primary configuration method has failed. In IPv6,[2] link-local addresses are mandatory and required for the internal functioning of various protocol components.

Link-local addresses for IPv4 are defined in the address block 169.254.0.0/16, in CIDR notation. In IPv6, they are assigned with the fe80::/64 prefix.

Contents

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  • 1 IPv4
  • 2 IPv6
  • 3 See also
  • 4 Notes
  • 5 References

IPv4[edit source | edit]

In RFC 3927, the Internet Engineering Task Force has reserved the address block 169.254.1.0 through 169.254.254.255[note 1] for link-local addressing in Internet Protocol Version 4. Link-local addresses are assigned to interfaces by host-internal, i.e. stateless, address autoconfiguration when other means of address assignment are not available.[1]

RFC 3927 warns against the simultaneous use of addresses of different scope,[3] such as configuring link-local addresses as well as globally routable addresses on the same host. Therefore, hosts search for a DHCP server on the network before assigning link-local addresses.

In the automatic address configuration process, network hosts select a random candidate address within the reserved range and use Address Resolution Protocol (ARP) probes to ascertain that the address is not in use on the network. If a reply is received to the ARP, it indicates the candidate IP address is already in use; a new random candidate IP address is then created and the process repeated. The process ends when there is no reply to the ARP, indicating the candidate IP address is available.

When a globally routable or a private address becomes available after a link-local address has been assigned, the use of the new address should generally be preferred to the link-local address for new connections but communication via the link-local address is still possible.[4]

Microsoft refers to this address autoconfiguration method as Automatic Private IP Addressing (APIPA).[5] It is sometimes also casually referred to as auto-IP.

IPv6[edit source | edit]

In the Internet Protocol Version 6 (IPv6), the address block fe80::/10 has been reserved for link-local unicast addressing.[2] The actual link local addresses are assigned with the prefix fe80::/64.[6][note 2] They may be assigned by automatic (stateless) or stateful (e.g. manual) mechanisms.

Unlike IPv4, IPv6 requires a link-local address to be assigned to every network interface on which the IPv6 protocol is enabled, even when one or more routable addresses are also assigned.[7] Consequently, IPv6 hosts usually have more than one IPv6 address assigned to each of their IPv6-enabled network interfaces. The link-local address is required for IPv6 sublayer operations of the Neighbor Discovery Protocol, as well as for some other IPv6-based protocols, like DHCPv6.

In IPv6, stateless address autoconfiguration is performed as a component of the Neighbor Discovery Protocol (NDP),[8] as specified in RFC 4862. The address is formed from its routing prefix and the MAC address of the interface.

IPv6 introduced additional means of assigning addresses to host interfaces. Through NDP routing prefix advertisements, a router or a dedicated server host may announce configuration information to all link-attached interfaces which causes additional IP address assignment on the receiving interfaces for local or global routing purposes. This process is sometimes also considered stateless, as the prefix server does not receive or log any individual assignments to hosts. Uniqueness is guaranteed automatically by the address selection methodology (MAC-address based according to RFC 4862, and/or randomized according to RFC 4941) in combination with the duplicate address detection algorithm.

转载于:https://www.cnblogs.com/kungfupanda/p/3272073.html

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