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Neighbor reachability detection, Duplicate address detection, Figure 355 – H3C Technologies H3C SecPath F1000-E User Manual

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Figure 355 Address resolution

The address resolution operates in the following steps:

1.

Host A multicasts an NS message. The source address of the NS message is the IPv6 address of the

sending interface of Host A and the destination address is the solicited-node multicast address of
Host B. The NS message contains the link-layer address of Host A.

2.

After receiving the NS message, Host B judges whether the destination address of the packet is its
solicited-node multicast address. If yes, Host B learns the link-layer address of Host A, and then

unicasts an NA message containing its link-layer address.

3.

Host A acquires the link-layer address of Host B from the NA message.

Neighbor reachability detection

After Host A acquires the link-layer address of its neighbor Host B, Host A can use NS and NA messages
to check whether Host B is reachable.

1.

Host A sends an NS message whose destination address is the IPv6 address of Host B.

2.

If Host A receives an NA message from Host B, Host A decides that Host B is reachable. Otherwise,
Host B is unreachable.

Duplicate address detection

After Host A acquires an IPv6 address, it performs Duplicate Address Detection (DAD) to check whether

the address is being used by any other node (similar to the gratuitous ARP function in IPv4). DAD is

accomplished through NS and NA message exchanges.

Figure 356

shows the DAD process.

Figure 356 Duplicate address detection

1.

Host A sends an NS message whose source address is the unspecified address and whose
destination address is the corresponding solicited-node multicast address of the IPv6 address to be

detected. The NS message contains the IPv6 address.

2.

If Host B uses this IPv6 address, Host B returns an NA message. The NA message contains the IPv6
address of Host B.