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IPv6 Multicast and Anycast Addressing
(Page 3 of 5)
Well-Known Multicast Addresses
The Transient flag allows
for explicit determination of which multicast addresses are available
for normal use compared to which are set aside as well-known.
Several predefined well-known multicast addresses are defined, by setting
aside certain Group IDs that are used for a number of different scope
ID values. Table 66
shows these values; the x in the multicast address pattern
is the hexadecimal digit corresponding to the 4-bit scope ID field.
The All Nodes and All
Routers multicast addresses enable the equivalent function of
what broadcast used to perform in IPv4. Again, the concept of scope
is important in a multicast of this type because we don't want to try
to send a message to all nodes on the global Internet, for
example. So, when the all routers address is used with a
scope value of 2, it means all routers on the local link.
If it is used with a value of 5, it means all routers in this
site.
Table 66: Important IPv6 Well-Known Multicast Addresses
Multicast
Address Pattern
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Valid
Scope Values (decimal)
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Designation
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Description
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FF0x:0:0:0:0:0:0
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0 to 15
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Reserved
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All multicast addresses where
the 112-bit Group ID is zero are reserved.
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FF0x:0:0:0:0:0:1
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1,
2
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All
Nodes
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When the Group
ID is equal to exactly 1, this is a multicast to all nodes. Both node-local
(FF01:0:0:0:0:0:1) and link-local (FF02:0:0:0:0:0:1) all nodes
multicast addresses are possible.
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FF0x:0:0:0:0:0:2
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1, 2, 5
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All Routers
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When the group ID is equal to
exactly 2, this designates all routers within a specific scope as the
recipients. Valid scope values are node-local, link-local and site-local.
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Version 3.0 - Version Date: September 20, 2005
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