Network Working Group                                        T. Narten
Request for Comments: 2461                                         IBM
Obsoletes: 1970                                            E. Nordmark
Category: Standards Track                             Sun Microsystems
                                                           W. Simpson
                                                           Daydreamer
                                                        December 1998


              Neighbor Discovery for IP Version 6 (IPv6)

Status of this Memo

  This document specifies an Internet standards track protocol for the
  Internet community, and requests discussion and suggestions for
  improvements.  Please refer to the current edition of the "Internet
  Official Protocol Standards" (STD 1) for the standardization state
  and status of this protocol.  Distribution of this memo is unlimited.

Copyright Notice

  Copyright (C) The Internet Society (1998).  All Rights Reserved.

Abstract

  This document specifies the Neighbor Discovery protocol for IP
  Version 6.  IPv6 nodes on the same link use Neighbor Discovery to
  discover each other's presence, to determine each other's link-layer
  addresses, to find routers and to maintain reachability information
  about the paths to active neighbors.

  Table of Contents

  1.  INTRODUCTION.............................................    3
  2.  TERMINOLOGY..............................................    4
     2.1.  General.............................................    4
     2.2.  Link Types..........................................    7
     2.3.  Addresses...........................................    8
     2.4.  Requirements........................................    9
  3.  PROTOCOL OVERVIEW........................................    9
     3.1.  Comparison with IPv4................................   13
     3.2.  Supported Link Types................................   15
  4.  MESSAGE FORMATS..........................................   17
     4.1.  Router Solicitation Message Format..................   17
     4.2.  Router Advertisement Message Format.................   18
     4.3.  Neighbor Solicitation Message Format................   21
     4.4.  Neighbor Advertisement Message Format...............   23
     4.5.  Redirect Message Format.............................   26



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RFC 2461              Neighbor Discovery for IPv6          December 1998


     4.6.  Option Formats......................................   28
        4.6.1.  Source/Target Link-layer Address...............   28
        4.6.2.  Prefix Information.............................   29
        4.6.3.  Redirected Header..............................   31
        4.6.4.  MTU............................................   32
  5.  CONCEPTUAL MODEL OF A HOST...............................   33
     5.1.  Conceptual Data Structures..........................   33
     5.2.  Conceptual Sending Algorithm........................   35
     5.3.  Garbage Collection and Timeout Requirements.........   37
  6.  ROUTER AND PREFIX DISCOVERY..............................   37
     6.1.  Message Validation..................................   38
        6.1.1.  Validation of Router Solicitation Messages.....   38
        6.1.2.  Validation of Router Advertisement Messages....   39
     6.2.  Router Specification................................   40
        6.2.1.  Router Configuration Variables.................   40
        6.2.2.  Becoming An Advertising Interface..............   44
        6.2.3.  Router Advertisement Message Content...........   44
        6.2.4.  Sending Unsolicited Router Advertisements......   46
        6.2.5.  Ceasing To Be An Advertising Interface.........   46
        6.2.6.  Processing Router Solicitations................   47
        6.2.7.  Router Advertisement Consistency...............   48
        6.2.8.  Link-local Address Change......................   49
     6.3.  Host Specification..................................   50
        6.3.1.  Host Configuration Variables...................   50
        6.3.2.  Host Variables.................................   50
        6.3.3.  Interface Initialization.......................   51
        6.3.4.  Processing Received Router Advertisements......   51
        6.3.5.  Timing out Prefixes and Default Routers........   54
        6.3.6.  Default Router Selection.......................   54
        6.3.7.  Sending Router Solicitations...................   55
  7.  ADDRESS RESOLUTION AND NEIGHBOR UNREACHABILITY DETECTION.   56
     7.1.  Message Validation..................................   57
        7.1.1.  Validation of Neighbor Solicitations...........   57
        7.1.2.  Validation of Neighbor Advertisements..........   58
     7.2.  Address Resolution..................................   58
        7.2.1.  Interface Initialization.......................   59
        7.2.2.  Sending Neighbor Solicitations.................   59
        7.2.3.  Receipt of Neighbor Solicitations..............   60
        7.2.4.  Sending Solicited Neighbor Advertisements......   61
        7.2.5.  Receipt of Neighbor Advertisements.............   62
        7.2.6.  Sending Unsolicited Neighbor Advertisements....   64
        7.2.7.  Anycast Neighbor Advertisements................   65
        7.2.8.  Proxy Neighbor Advertisements..................   65
     7.3.  Neighbor Unreachability Detection...................   66
        7.3.1.  Reachability Confirmation......................   66
        7.3.2.  Neighbor Cache Entry States....................   67
        7.3.3.  Node Behavior..................................   68
  8.  REDIRECT FUNCTION........................................   70



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     8.1.  Validation of Redirect Messages.....................   71
     8.2.  Router Specification................................   72
     8.3.  Host Specification..................................   73
  9.  EXTENSIBILITY - OPTION PROCESSING........................   74
  10.  PROTOCOL CONSTANTS......................................   75
  11.  SECURITY CONSIDERATIONS.................................   76
  12.  RENUMBERING CONSIDERATIONS..............................   78

  References...................................................   80
  Authors' Addresses...........................................   81
  Appendix A: Multihomed Hosts.................................   82
  Appendix B: Future Extensions................................   84
  Appendix C: State Machine for the Reachability State.........   85
  Appendix D: Summary of ISROUTER Rules........................   88
  Appendix E: Implementation Issues............................   89
      Appendix E.1: Reachability confirmations.................   89
  Appendix F: Changes since RFC 1970...........................   91
  Full Copyright Statement.....................................   93

1.  INTRODUCTION

  This specification defines the Neighbor Discovery (ND) protocol for
  Internet Protocol Version 6 (IPv6).  Nodes (hosts and routers) use
  Neighbor Discovery to determine the link-layer addresses for
  neighbors known to reside on attached links and to quickly purge
  cached values that become invalid.  Hosts also use Neighbor Discovery
  to find neighboring routers that are willing to forward packets on
  their behalf.  Finally, nodes use the protocol to actively keep track
  of which neighbors are reachable and which are not, and to detect
  changed link-layer addresses.  When a router or the path to a router
  fails, a host actively searches for functioning alternates.

  Unless specified otherwise (in a document that covers operating IP
  over a particular link type) this document applies to all link types.
  However, because ND uses link-layer multicast for some of its
  services, it is possible that on some link types (e.g., NBMA links)
  alternative protocols or mechanisms to implement those services will
  be specified (in the appropriate document covering the operation of
  IP over a particular link type).  The services described in this
  document that are not directly dependent on multicast, such as
  Redirects, Next-hop determination, Neighbor Unreachability Detection,
  etc., are expected to be provided as specified in this document.  The
  details of how one uses ND on NBMA links is an area for further
  study.

  The authors would like to acknowledge the contributions of the IPNGWG
  working group and, in particular, (in alphabetical order) Ran
  Atkinson, Jim Bound, Scott Bradner, Alex Conta, Stephen Deering,



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RFC 2461              Neighbor Discovery for IPv6          December 1998


  Richard Draves, Francis Dupont, Robert Elz, Robert Gilligan, Robert
  Hinden, Allison Mankin, Dan McDonald, Charles Perkins, Matt Thomas,
  and Susan Thomson.

2.  TERMINOLOGY

2.1.  General

  IP          - Internet Protocol Version 6.  The terms IPv4 and
                IPv6 are used only in contexts where necessary to avoid
                ambiguity.

  ICMP        - Internet Message Control Protocol for the Internet
                Protocol Version 6.  The terms ICMPv4 and ICMPv6 are
                used only in contexts where necessary to avoid
                ambiguity.

  node        - a device that implements IP.

  router      - a node that forwards IP packets not explicitly
                addressed to itself.

  host        - any node that is not a router.

  upper layer - a protocol layer immediately above IP.  Examples are
                transport protocols such as TCP and UDP, control
                protocols such as ICMP, routing protocols such as OSPF,
                and internet or lower-layer protocols being "tunneled"
                over (i.e., encapsulated in) IP such as IPX, AppleTalk,
                or IP itself.

  link        - a communication facility or medium over which nodes can
                communicate at the link layer, i.e., the layer
                immediately below IP.  Examples are Ethernets (simple
                or bridged), PPP links, X.25, Frame Relay, or ATM
                networks as well as internet (or higher) layer
                "tunnels", such as tunnels over IPv4 or IPv6 itself.

  interface   - a node's attachment to a link.

  neighbors   - nodes attached to the same link.

  address     - an IP-layer identifier for an interface or a set of
                interfaces.

  anycast address
              - an identifier for a set of interfaces (typically
                belonging to different nodes).  A packet sent to an



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RFC 2461              Neighbor Discovery for IPv6          December 1998


                anycast address is delivered to one of the interfaces
                identified by that address (the "nearest" one,
                according to the routing protocol's measure of
                distance).  See [ADDR-ARCH].

                Note that an anycast address is syntactically
                indistinguishable from a unicast address.  Thus, nodes
                sending packets to anycast addresses don't generally
                know that an anycast address is being used.  Throughout
                the rest of this document, references to unicast
                addresses also apply to anycast addresses in those
                cases where the node is unaware that a unicast address
                is actually an anycast address.

  prefix      - a bit string that consists of some number of initial
                bits of an address.

  link-layer address
              - a link-layer identifier for an interface.  Examples
                include IEEE 802 addresses for Ethernet links and E.164
                addresses for ISDN links.

  on-link     - an address that is assigned to an interface on a
                specified link.  A node considers an address to be on-
                link if:

                   - it is covered by one of the link's prefixes, or

                   - a neighboring router specifies the address as
                     the target of a Redirect message, or

                   - a Neighbor Advertisement message is received for
                     the (target) address, or

                   - any Neighbor Discovery message is received from
                     the address.

  off-link    - the opposite of "on-link"; an address that is not
                assigned to any interfaces on the specified link.

  longest prefix match
              - The process of determining which prefix (if any) in
                a set of prefixes covers a target address.  A target
                address is covered by a prefix if all of the bits in
                the prefix match the left-most bits of the target
                address.  When multiple prefixes cover an address,
                the longest prefix is the one that matches.




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RFC 2461              Neighbor Discovery for IPv6          December 1998


  reachability
              - whether or not the one-way "forward" path to a
                neighbor is functioning properly.  In particular,
                whether packets sent to a neighbor are reaching the
                IP layer on the neighboring machine and are being
                processed properly by the receiving IP layer.  For
                neighboring routers, reachability means that packets
                sent by a node's IP layer are delivered to the
                router's IP layer, and the router is indeed
                forwarding packets (i.e., it is configured as a
                router, not a host).  For hosts, reachability means
                that packets sent by a node's IP layer are delivered
                to the neighbor host's IP layer.

  packet      - an IP header plus payload.

  link MTU    - the maximum transmission unit, i.e., maximum packet
                size in octets, that can be conveyed in one piece
                over a link.

  target      - an address about which address resolution
                information is sought, or an address which is the
                new first-hop when being redirected.

  proxy       - a router that responds to Neighbor Discovery query
                messages on behalf of another node.  A router acting
                on behalf of a mobile node that has moved off-link
                could potentially act as a proxy for the mobile
                node.

  ICMP destination unreachable indication
              - an error indication returned to the original sender
                of a packet that cannot be delivered for the reasons
                outlined in [ICMPv6].  If the error occurs on a node
                other than the node originating the packet, an ICMP
                error message is generated.  If the error occurs on
                the originating node, an implementation is not
                required to actually create and send an ICMP error
                packet to the source, as long as the upper-layer
                sender is notified through an appropriate mechanism
                (e.g., return value from a procedure call).  Note,
                however, that an implementation may find it
                convenient in some cases to return errors to the
                sender by taking the offending packet, generating an
                ICMP error message, and then delivering it (locally)
                through the generic error handling routines.





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RFC 2461              Neighbor Discovery for IPv6          December 1998


  random delay
              - when sending out messages, it is sometimes necessary to
                delay a transmission for a random amount of time in
                order to prevent multiple nodes from transmitting at
                exactly the same time, or to prevent long-range
                periodic transmissions from synchronizing with each
                other [SYNC].  When a random component is required, a
                node calculates the actual delay in such a way that the
                computed delay forms a uniformly-distributed random
                value that falls between the specified minimum and
                maximum delay times.  The implementor must take care to
                insure that the granularity of the calculated random
                component and the resolution of the timer used are both
                high enough to insure that the probability of multiple
                nodes delaying the same amount of time is small.

  random delay seed
              - If a pseudo-random number generator is used in
                calculating a random delay component, the generator
                should be initialized with a unique seed prior to being
                used.  Note that it is not sufficient to use the
                interface token alone as the seed, since interface
                tokens will not always be unique.  To reduce the
                probability that duplicate interface tokens cause the
                same seed to be used, the seed should be calculated
                from a variety of input sources (e.g., machine
                components) that are likely to be different even on
                identical "boxes".  For example, the seed could be
                formed by combining the CPU's serial number with an
                interface token.

2.2.  Link Types

  Different link layers have different properties.  The ones of concern
  to Neighbor Discovery are:

  multicast      - a link that supports a native mechanism at the
                   link layer for sending packets to all (i.e.,
                   broadcast) or a subset of all neighbors.

  point-to-point - a link that connects exactly two interfaces.  A
                   point-to-point link is assumed to have multicast
                   capability and have a link-local address.

  non-broadcast multi-access (NBMA)
                 - a link to which more than two interfaces can attach,
                   but that does not support a native form of multicast
                   or broadcast (e.g., X.25, ATM, frame relay, etc.).



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RFC 2461              Neighbor Discovery for IPv6          December 1998


                   Note that all link types (including NBMA) are
                   expected to provide multicast service for IP (e.g.,
                   using multicast servers), but it is an issue for
                   further study whether ND should use such facilities
                   or an alternate mechanism that provides the
                   equivalent ND services.

  shared media   - a link that allows direct communication among a
                   number of nodes, but attached nodes are configured
                   in such a way that they do not have complete prefix
                   information for all on-link destinations.  That is,
                   at the IP level, nodes on the same link may not know
                   that they are neighbors; by default, they
                   communicate through a router.  Examples are large
                   (switched) public data networks such as SMDS and B-
                   ISDN.  Also known as "large clouds".  See [SH-
                   MEDIA].

  variable MTU   - a link that does not have a well-defined MTU (e.g.,
                   IEEE 802.5 token rings).  Many links (e.g.,
                   Ethernet) have a standard MTU defined by the link-
                   layer protocol or by the specific document
                   describing how to run IP over the link layer.

  asymmetric reachability
                 - a link where non-reflexive and/or non-transitive
                   reachability is part of normal operation.  (Non-
                   reflexive reachability means packets from A reach B
                   but packets from B don't reach A.  Non-transitive
                   reachability means packets from A reach B, and
                   packets from B reach C, but packets from A don't
                   reach C.)  Many radio links exhibit these
                   properties.

2.3.  Addresses

  Neighbor Discovery makes use of a number of different addresses
  defined in [ADDR-ARCH], including:

  all-nodes multicast address
              - the link-local scope address to reach all nodes.
                FF02::1

  all-routers multicast address
              - the link-local scope address to reach all routers.
                FF02::2





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RFC 2461              Neighbor Discovery for IPv6          December 1998


  solicited-node multicast address
              - a link-local scope multicast address that is computed
                as a function of the solicited target's address.  The
                function is described in [ADDR-ARCH]. The function is
                chosen so that IP addresses which differ only in the
                high-order bits, e.g., due to multiple high-order
                prefixes associated with different providers, will map
                to the same solicited-node address thereby reducing the
                number of multicast addresses a node must join.

  link-local address
              - a unicast address having link-only scope that can be
                used to reach neighbors.  All interfaces on routers
                MUST have a link-local address.  Also, [ADDRCONF]
                requires that interfaces on hosts have a link-local
                address.

  unspecified address
              - a reserved address value that indicates the lack of an
                address (e.g., the address is unknown).  It is never
                used as a destination address, but may be used as a
                source address if the sender does not (yet) know its
                own address (e.g., while verifying an address is unused
                during address autoconfiguration [ADDRCONF]).  The
                unspecified address has a value of 0:0:0:0:0:0:0:0.

2.4.  Requirements

  The keywords MUST, MUST NOT, REQUIRED, SHALL, SHALL NOT, SHOULD,
  SHOULD NOT, RECOMMENDED, MAY, and OPTIONAL, when they appear in this
  document, are to be interpreted as described in [KEYWORDS].

  This document also makes use of internal conceptual variables to
  describe protocol behavior and external variables that an
  implementation must allow system administrators to change.  The
  specific variable names, how their values change, and how their
  settings influence protocol behavior are provided to demonstrate
  protocol behavior.  An implementation is not required to have them in
  the exact form described here, so long as its external behavior is
  consistent with that described in this document.

3.  PROTOCOL OVERVIEW

  This protocol solves a set of problems related to the interaction
  between nodes attached to the same link.  It defines mechanisms for
  solving each of the following problems:





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RFC 2461              Neighbor Discovery for IPv6          December 1998


    Router Discovery: How hosts locate routers that reside on an
               attached link.

    Prefix Discovery: How hosts discover the set of address prefixes
               that define which destinations are on-link for an
               attached link.  (Nodes use prefixes to distinguish
               destinations that reside on-link from those only
               reachable through a router.)

    Parameter Discovery: How a node learns such link parameters as the
               link MTU or such Internet parameters as the hop limit
               value to place in outgoing packets.

    Address Autoconfiguration: How nodes automatically configure an
               address for an interface.

    Address resolution: How nodes determine the link-layer address of
               an on-link destination (e.g., a neighbor) given only the
               destination's IP address.

    Next-hop determination: The algorithm for mapping an IP destination
               address into the IP address of the neighbor to which
               traffic for the destination should be sent.  The next-
               hop can be a router or the destination itself.

    Neighbor Unreachability Detection: How nodes determine that a
               neighbor is no longer reachable.  For neighbors used as
               routers, alternate default routers can be tried.  For
               both routers and hosts, address resolution can be
               performed again.

    Duplicate Address Detection: How a node determines that an address
               it wishes to use is not already in use by another node.

    Redirect:  How a router informs a host of a better first-hop node
               to reach a particular destination.

  Neighbor Discovery defines five different ICMP packet types: A pair
  of Router Solicitation and Router Advertisement messages, a pair of
  Neighbor Solicitation and Neighbor Advertisements messages, and a
  Redirect message.  The messages serve the following purpose:

    Router Solicitation: When an interface becomes enabled, hosts may
               send out Router Solicitations that request routers to
               generate Router Advertisements immediately rather than
               at their next scheduled time.





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RFC 2461              Neighbor Discovery for IPv6          December 1998


    Router Advertisement: Routers advertise their presence together
               with various link and Internet parameters either
               periodically, or in response to a Router Solicitation
               message.  Router Advertisements contain prefixes that
               are used for on-link determination and/or address
               configuration, a suggested hop limit value, etc.

    Neighbor Solicitation: Sent by a node to determine the link-layer
               address of a neighbor, or to verify that a neighbor is
               still reachable via a cached link-layer address.
               Neighbor Solicitations are also used for Duplicate
               Address Detection.

    Neighbor Advertisement: A response to a Neighbor Solicitation
               message.  A node may also send unsolicited Neighbor
               Advertisements to announce a link-layer address change.

    Redirect:  Used by routers to inform hosts of a better first hop
               for a destination.

  On multicast-capable links, each router periodically multicasts a
  Router Advertisement packet announcing its availability.  A host
  receives Router Advertisements from all routers, building a list of
  default routers.  Routers generate Router Advertisements frequently
  enough that hosts will learn of their presence within a few minutes,
  but not frequently enough to rely on an absence of advertisements to
  detect router failure; a separate Neighbor Unreachability Detection
  algorithm provides failure detection.

  Router Advertisements contain a list of prefixes used for on-link
  determination and/or autonomous address configuration; flags
  associated with the prefixes specify the intended uses of a
  particular prefix.  Hosts use the advertised on-link prefixes to
  build and maintain a list that is used in deciding when a packet's
  destination is on-link or beyond a router.  Note that a destination
  can be on-link even though it is not covered by any advertised on-
  link prefix.  In such cases a router can send a Redirect informing
  the sender that the destination is a neighbor.

  Router Advertisements (and per-prefix flags) allow routers to inform
  hosts how to perform Address Autoconfiguration.  For example, routers
  can specify whether hosts should use stateful (DHCPv6) and/or
  autonomous (stateless) address configuration.  The exact semantics
  and usage of the address configuration-related information is
  specified in [ADDRCONF].

  Router Advertisement messages also contain Internet parameters such
  as the hop limit that hosts should use in outgoing packets and,



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RFC 2461              Neighbor Discovery for IPv6          December 1998


  optionally, link parameters such as the link MTU.  This facilitates
  centralized administration of critical parameters that can be set on
  routers and automatically propagated to all attached hosts.

  Nodes accomplish address resolution by multicasting a Neighbor
  Solicitation that asks the target node to return its link-layer
  address.  Neighbor Solicitation messages are multicast to the
  solicited-node multicast address of the target address.  The target
  returns its link-layer address in a unicast Neighbor Advertisement
  message.  A single request-response pair of packets is sufficient for
  both the initiator and the target to resolve each other's link-layer
  addresses; the initiator includes its link-layer address in the
  Neighbor Solicitation.

  Neighbor Solicitation messages can also be used to determine if more
  than one node has been assigned the same unicast address.  The use of
  Neighbor Solicitation messages for Duplicate Address Detection is
  specified in [ADDRCONF].

  Neighbor Unreachability Detection detects the failure of a neighbor
  or the failure of the forward path to the neighbor.  Doing so
  requires positive confirmation that packets sent to a neighbor are
  actually reaching that neighbor and being processed properly by its
  IP layer.  Neighbor Unreachability Detection uses confirmation from
  two sources.  When possible, upper-layer protocols provide a positive
  confirmation that a connection is making "forward progress", that is,
  previously sent data is known to have been delivered correctly (e.g.,
  new acknowledgments were received recently).  When positive
  confirmation is not forthcoming through such "hints", a node sends
  unicast Neighbor Solicitation messages that solicit Neighbor
  Advertisements as reachability confirmation from the next hop.  To
  reduce unnecessary network traffic, probe messages are only sent to
  neighbors to which the node is actively sending packets.

  In addition to addressing the above general problems, Neighbor
  Discovery also handles the following situations:

    Link-layer address change - A node that knows its link-layer
          address has changed can multicast a few (unsolicited)
          Neighbor Advertisement packets to all nodes to quickly update
          cached link-layer addresses that have become invalid.  Note
          that the sending of unsolicited advertisements is a
          performance enhancement only (e.g., unreliable).  The
          Neighbor Unreachability Detection algorithm ensures that all
          nodes will reliably discover the new address, though the
          delay may be somewhat longer.





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RFC 2461              Neighbor Discovery for IPv6          December 1998


    Inbound load balancing - Nodes with replicated interfaces may want
          to load balance the reception of incoming packets across
          multiple network interfaces on the same link.  Such nodes
          have multiple link-layer addresses assigned to the same
          interface.  For example, a single network driver could
          represent multiple network interface cards as a single
          logical interface having multiple link-layer addresses.

          Load balancing is handled by allowing routers to omit the
          source link-layer address from Router Advertisement packets,
          thereby forcing neighbors to use Neighbor Solicitation
          messages to learn link-layer addresses of routers.  Returned
          Neighbor Advertisement messages can then contain link-layer
          addresses that differ depending on who issued the
          solicitation.

    Anycast addresses - Anycast addresses identify one of a set of
          nodes providing an equivalent service, and multiple nodes on
          the same link may be configured to recognize the same Anycast
          address.  Neighbor Discovery handles anycasts by having nodes
          expect to receive multiple Neighbor Advertisements for the
          same target.  All advertisements for anycast addresses are
          tagged as being non-Override advertisements.  This invokes
          specific rules to determine which of potentially multiple
          advertisements should be used.

    Proxy advertisements - A router willing to accept packets on behalf
          of a target address that is unable to respond to Neighbor
          Solicitations can issue non-Override Neighbor Advertisements.
          There is currently no specified use of proxy, but proxy
          advertising could potentially be used to handle cases like
          mobile nodes that have moved off-link.  However, it is not
          intended as a general mechanism to handle nodes that, e.g.,
          do not implement this protocol.

3.1.  Comparison with IPv4

  The IPv6 Neighbor Discovery protocol corresponds to a combination of
  the IPv4 protocols ARP [ARP], ICMP Router Discovery [RDISC], and ICMP
  Redirect [ICMPv4].  In IPv4 there is no generally agreed upon
  protocol or mechanism for Neighbor Unreachability Detection, although
  Hosts Requirements [HR-CL] does specify some possible algorithms for
  Dead Gateway Detection (a subset of the problems Neighbor
  Unreachability Detection tackles).

  The Neighbor Discovery protocol provides a multitude of improvements
  over the IPv4 set of protocols:




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RFC 2461              Neighbor Discovery for IPv6          December 1998


     Router Discovery is part of the base protocol set; there is no
     need for hosts to "snoop" the routing protocols.

     Router advertisements carry link-layer addresses; no additional
     packet exchange is needed to resolve the router's link-layer
     address.

     Router advertisements carry prefixes for a link; there is no need
     to have a separate mechanism to configure the "netmask".

     Router advertisements enable Address Autoconfiguration.

     Routers can advertise an MTU for hosts to use on the link,
     ensuring that all nodes use the same MTU value on links lacking a
     well-defined MTU.

     Address resolution multicasts are "spread" over 4 billion (2^32)
     multicast addresses greatly reducing address resolution related
     interrupts on nodes other than the target.  Moreover, non-IPv6
     machines should not be interrupted at all.

     Redirects contain the link-layer address of the new first hop;
     separate address resolution is not needed upon receiving a
     redirect.

     Multiple prefixes can be associated with the same link.  By
     default, hosts learn all on-link prefixes from Router
     Advertisements.  However, routers may be configured to omit some
     or all prefixes from Router Advertisements.  In such cases hosts
     assume that destinations are off-link and send traffic to routers.
     A router can then issue redirects as appropriate.

     Unlike IPv4, the recipient of an IPv6 redirect assumes that the
     new next-hop is on-link.  In IPv4, a host ignores redirects
     specifying a next-hop that is not on-link according to the link's
     network mask.  The IPv6 redirect mechanism is analogous to the
     XRedirect facility specified in [SH-MEDIA].  It is expected to be
     useful on non-broadcast and shared media links in which it is
     undesirable or not possible for nodes to know all prefixes for
     on-link destinations.

     Neighbor Unreachability Detection is part of the base
     significantly improving the robustness of packet delivery in the
     presence of failing routers, partially failing or partitioned
     links and nodes that change their link-layer addresses.  For
     instance, mobile nodes can move off-link without losing any
     connectivity due to stale ARP caches.




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RFC 2461              Neighbor Discovery for IPv6          December 1998


     Unlike ARP, Neighbor Discovery detects half-link failures (using
     Neighbor Unreachability Detection) and avoids sending traffic to
     neighbors with which two-way connectivity is absent.

     Unlike in IPv4 Router Discovery the Router Advertisement messages
     do not contain a preference field.  The preference field is not
     needed to handle routers of different "stability"; the Neighbor
     Unreachability Detection will detect dead routers and switch to a
     working one.

     The use of link-local addresses to uniquely identify routers (for
     Router Advertisement and Redirect messages) makes it possible for
     hosts to maintain the router associations in the event of the site
     renumbering to use new global prefixes.

     Using the Hop Limit equal to 255 trick Neighbor Discovery is
     immune to off-link senders that accidentally or intentionally send
     ND messages.  In IPv4 off-link senders can send both ICMP
     Redirects and Router Advertisement messages.

     Placing address resolution at the ICMP layer makes the protocol
     more media-independent than ARP and makes it possible to use
     standard IP authentication and security mechanisms as appropriate
     [IPv6-AUTH, IPv6-ESP].

3.2.  Supported Link Types

  Neighbor Discovery supports links with different properties.  In the
  presence of certain properties only a subset of the ND protocol
  mechanisms are fully specified in this document:

    point-to-point - Neighbor Discovery handles such links just like
                     multicast links.  (Multicast can be trivially
                     provided on point to point links, and interfaces
                     can be assigned link-local addresses.)  Neighbor
                     Discovery should be implemented as described in
                     this document.

    multicast      - Neighbor Discovery should be implemented as
                     described in this document.

    non-broadcast multiple access (NBMA)
                   - Redirect, Neighbor Unreachability Detection and
                     next-hop determination should be implemented as
                     described in this document.  Address resolution,
                     and the mechanism for delivering Router
                     Solicitations and Advertisements on NBMA links is
                     not specified in this document.  Note that if



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RFC 2461              Neighbor Discovery for IPv6          December 1998


                     hosts support manual configuration of a list of
                     default routers, hosts can dynamically acquire the
                     link-layer addresses for their neighbors from
                     Redirect messages.

    shared media   - The Redirect message is modeled after the
                     XRedirect message in [SH-MEDIA] in order to
                     simplify use of the protocol on shared media
                     links.

                     This specification does not address shared media
                     issues that only relate to routers, such as:

                      - How routers exchange reachability information
                        on a shared media link.

                      - How a router determines the link-layer address
                        of a host, which it needs to send redirect
                        messages to the host.

                      - How a router determines that it is the first-
                        hop router for a received packet.

                     The protocol is extensible (through the definition
                     of new options) so that other solutions might be
                     possible in the future.

    variable MTU   - Neighbor Discovery allows routers to specify a MTU
                     for the link, which all nodes then use.  All nodes
                     on a link must use the same MTU (or Maximum
                     Receive Unit) in order for multicast to work
                     properly.  Otherwise when multicasting a sender,
                     which can not know which nodes will receive the
                     packet, could not determine a minimum packet size
                     all receivers can process.

    asymmetric reachability
                   - Neighbor Discovery detects the absence of
                     symmetric reachability; a node avoids paths to a
                     neighbor with which it does not have symmetric
                     connectivity.

                     The Neighbor Unreachability Detection will
                     typically identify such half-links and the node
                     will refrain from using them.

                     The protocol can presumably be extended in the
                     future to find viable paths in environments that



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RFC 2461              Neighbor Discovery for IPv6          December 1998


                     lack reflexive and transitive connectivity.

4.  MESSAGE FORMATS

4.1.  Router Solicitation Message Format

  Hosts send Router Solicitations in order to prompt routers to
  generate Router Advertisements quickly.

     0                   1                   2                   3
     0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1
    +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
    |     Type      |     Code      |          Checksum             |
    +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
    |                            Reserved                           |
    +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
    |   Options ...
    +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-

  IP Fields:

     Source Address
                    An IP address assigned to the sending interface, or
                    the unspecified address if no address is assigned
                    to the sending interface.

     Destination Address
                    Typically the all-routers multicast address.

     Hop Limit      255

     Authentication Header
                    If a Security Association for the IP Authentication
                    Header exists between the sender and the
                    destination address, then the sender SHOULD include
                    this header.

  ICMP Fields:

     Type           133

     Code           0

     Checksum       The ICMP checksum.  See [ICMPv6].

     Reserved       This field is unused.  It MUST be initialized to
                    zero by the sender and MUST be ignored by the
                    receiver.



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RFC 2461              Neighbor Discovery for IPv6          December 1998


  Valid Options:

     Source link-layer address
                    The link-layer address of the sender, if known.
                    MUST NOT be included if the Source Address is the
                    unspecified address.  Otherwise it SHOULD be
                    included on link layers that have addresses.

     Future versions of this protocol may define new option types.
     Receivers MUST silently ignore any options they do not recognize
     and continue processing the message.

4.2.  Router Advertisement Message Format

  Routers send out Router Advertisement message periodically, or in
  response to a Router Solicitation.

     0                   1                   2                   3
     0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1
    +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
    |     Type      |     Code      |          Checksum             |
    +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
    | Cur Hop Limit |M|O|  Reserved |       Router Lifetime         |
    +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
    |                         Reachable Time                        |
    +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
    |                          Retrans Timer                        |
    +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
    |   Options ...
    +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-

  IP Fields:

     Source Address
                    MUST be the link-local address assigned to the
                    interface from which this message is sent.

     Destination Address
                    Typically the Source Address of an invoking Router
                    Solicitation or the all-nodes multicast address.

     Hop Limit      255

     Authentication Header
                    If a Security Association for the IP Authentication
                    Header exists between the sender and the
                    destination address, then the sender SHOULD include
                    this header.



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RFC 2461              Neighbor Discovery for IPv6          December 1998


  ICMP Fields:

     Type           134

     Code           0

     Checksum       The ICMP checksum.  See [ICMPv6].

     Cur Hop Limit  8-bit unsigned integer.  The default value that
                    should be placed in the Hop Count field of the IP
                    header for outgoing IP packets.  A value of zero
                    means unspecified (by this router).

     M              1-bit "Managed address configuration" flag.  When
                    set, hosts use the administered (stateful) protocol
                    for address autoconfiguration in addition to any
                    addresses autoconfigured using stateless address
                    autoconfiguration.  The use of this flag is
                    described in [ADDRCONF].

     O              1-bit "Other stateful configuration" flag.  When
                    set, hosts use the administered (stateful) protocol
                    for autoconfiguration of other (non-address)
                    information.  The use of this flag is described in
                    [ADDRCONF].

     Reserved       A 6-bit unused field.  It MUST be initialized to
                    zero by the sender and MUST be ignored by the
                    receiver.

     Router Lifetime
                    16-bit unsigned integer.  The lifetime associated
                    with the default router in units of seconds.  The
                    maximum value corresponds to 18.2 hours.  A
                    Lifetime of 0 indicates that the router is not a
                    default router and SHOULD NOT appear on the default
                    router list.  The Router Lifetime applies only to
                    the router's usefulness as a default router; it
                    does not apply to information contained in other
                    message fields or options.  Options that need time
                    limits for their information include their own
                    lifetime fields.

     Reachable Time 32-bit unsigned integer.  The time, in
                    milliseconds, that a node assumes a neighbor is
                    reachable after having received a reachability
                    confirmation.  Used by the Neighbor Unreachability
                    Detection algorithm (see Section 7.3).  A value of



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RFC 2461              Neighbor Discovery for IPv6          December 1998


                    zero means unspecified (by this router).

     Retrans Timer  32-bit unsigned integer.  The time, in
                    milliseconds, between retransmitted Neighbor
                    Solicitation messages.  Used by address resolution
                    and the Neighbor Unreachability Detection algorithm
                    (see Sections 7.2 and 7.3).  A value of zero means
                    unspecified (by this router).

  Possible options:

     Source link-layer address
                    The link-layer address of the interface from which
                    the Router Advertisement is sent.  Only used on
                    link layers that have addresses.  A router MAY omit
                    this option in order to enable inbound load sharing
                    across multiple link-layer addresses.

     MTU            SHOULD be sent on links that have a variable MTU
                    (as specified in the document that describes how to
                    run IP over the particular link type).  MAY be sent
                    on other links.

     Prefix Information
                    These options specify the prefixes that are on-link
                    and/or are used for address autoconfiguration.  A
                    router SHOULD include all its on-link prefixes
                    (except the link-local prefix) so that multihomed
                    hosts have complete prefix information about on-
                    link destinations for the links to which they
                    attach.  If complete information is lacking, a
                    multihomed host may not be able to choose the
                    correct outgoing interface when sending traffic to
                    its neighbors.

     Future versions of this protocol may define new option types.
     Receivers MUST silently ignore any options they do not recognize
     and continue processing the message.













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RFC 2461              Neighbor Discovery for IPv6          December 1998


4.3.  Neighbor Solicitation Message Format

  Nodes send Neighbor Solicitations to request the link-layer address
  of a target node while also providing their own link-layer address to
  the target.  Neighbor Solicitations are multicast when the node needs
  to resolve an address and unicast when the node seeks to verify the
  reachability of a neighbor.

        0                   1                   2                   3
        0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1
       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
       |     Type      |     Code      |          Checksum             |
       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
       |                           Reserved                            |
       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
       |                                                               |
       +                                                               +
       |                                                               |
       +                       Target Address                          +
       |                                                               |
       +                                                               +
       |                                                               |
       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
       |   Options ...
       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-

  IP Fields:

     Source Address
                    Either an address assigned to the interface from
                    which this message is sent or (if Duplicate Address
                    Detection is in progress [ADDRCONF]) the
                    unspecified address.

     Destination Address
                    Either the solicited-node multicast address
                    corresponding to the target address, or the target
                    address.

     Hop Limit      255

     Authentication Header
                    If a Security Association for the IP Authentication
                    Header exists between the sender and the
                    destination address, then the sender SHOULD include
                    this header.





Narten, et. al.             Standards Track                    [Page 21]

RFC 2461              Neighbor Discovery for IPv6          December 1998


  ICMP Fields:

     Type           135

     Code           0

     Checksum       The ICMP checksum.  See [ICMPv6].

     Reserved       This field is unused.  It MUST be initialized to
                    zero by the sender and MUST be ignored by the
                    receiver.

     Target Address
                    The IP address of the target of the solicitation.
                    It MUST NOT be a multicast address.

  Possible options:

     Source link-layer address
                    The link-layer address for the sender.  MUST NOT be
                    included when the source IP address is the
                    unspecified address.  Otherwise, on link layers
                    that have addresses this option MUST be included in
                    multicast solicitations and SHOULD be included in
                    unicast solicitations.

     Future versions of this protocol may define new option types.
     Receivers MUST silently ignore any options they do not recognize
     and continue processing the message.






















Narten, et. al.             Standards Track                    [Page 22]

RFC 2461              Neighbor Discovery for IPv6          December 1998


4.4.  Neighbor Advertisement Message Format

  A node sends Neighbor Advertisements in response to Neighbor
  Solicitations and sends unsolicited Neighbor Advertisements in order
  to (unreliably) propagate new information quickly.

      0                   1                   2                   3
      0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1
     +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
     |     Type      |     Code      |          Checksum             |
     +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
     |R|S|O|                     Reserved                            |
     +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
     |                                                               |
     +                                                               +
     |                                                               |
     +                       Target Address                          +
     |                                                               |
     +                                                               +
     |                                                               |
     +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
     |   Options ...
     +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-

  IP Fields:

     Source Address
                    An address assigned to the interface from which the
                    advertisement is sent.

     Destination Address
                    For solicited advertisements, the Source Address of
                    an invoking Neighbor Solicitation or, if the
                    solicitation's Source Address is the unspecified
                    address, the all-nodes multicast address.

                    For unsolicited advertisements typically the all-
                    nodes multicast address.

     Hop Limit      255

  Authentication Header
                    If a Security Association for the IP Authentication
                    Header exists between the sender and the
                    destination address, then the sender SHOULD include
                    this header.





Narten, et. al.             Standards Track                    [Page 23]

RFC 2461              Neighbor Discovery for IPv6          December 1998


  ICMP Fields:

     Type           136

     Code           0

     Checksum       The ICMP checksum.  See [ICMPv6].

     R              Router flag.  When set, the R-bit indicates that
                    the sender is a router.  The R-bit is used by
                    Neighbor Unreachability Detection to detect a
                    router that changes to a host.

     S              Solicited flag.  When set, the S-bit indicates that
                    the advertisement was sent in response to a
                    Neighbor Solicitation from the Destination address.
                    The S-bit is used as a reachability confirmation
                    for Neighbor Unreachability Detection.  It MUST NOT
                    be set in multicast advertisements or in
                    unsolicited unicast advertisements.

     O              Override flag.  When set, the O-bit indicates that
                    the advertisement should override an existing cache
                    entry and update the cached link-layer address.
                    When it is not set the advertisement will not
                    update a cached link-layer address though it will
                    update an existing Neighbor Cache entry for which
                    no link-layer address is known.  It SHOULD NOT be
                    set in solicited advertisements for anycast
                    addresses and in solicited proxy advertisements.
                    It SHOULD be set in other solicited advertisements
                    and in unsolicited advertisements.

     Reserved       29-bit unused field.  It MUST be initialized to
                    zero by the sender and MUST be ignored by the
                    receiver.

     Target Address
                    For solicited advertisements, the Target Address
                    field in the Neighbor Solicitation message that
                    prompted this advertisement.  For an unsolicited
                    advertisement, the address whose link-layer address
                    has changed.  The Target Address MUST NOT be a
                    multicast address.







Narten, et. al.             Standards Track                    [Page 24]

RFC 2461              Neighbor Discovery for IPv6          December 1998


  Possible options:

     Target link-layer address
                    The link-layer address for the target, i.e., the
                    sender of the advertisement.  This option MUST be
                    included on link layers that have addresses when
                    responding to multicast solicitations.  When
                    responding to a unicast Neighbor Solicitation this
                    option SHOULD be included.

                    The option MUST be included for multicast
                    solicitations in order to avoid infinite Neighbor
                    Solicitation "recursion" when the peer node does
                    not have a cache entry to return a Neighbor
                    Advertisements message.  When responding to unicast
                    solicitations, the option can be omitted since the
                    sender of the solicitation has the correct link-
                    layer address; otherwise it would not have be able
                    to send the unicast solicitation in the first
                    place. However, including the link-layer address in
                    this case adds little overhead and eliminates a
                    potential race condition where the sender deletes
                    the cached link-layer address prior to receiving a
                    response to a previous solicitation.

     Future versions of this protocol may define new option types.
     Receivers MUST silently ignore any options they do not recognize
     and continue processing the message.























Narten, et. al.             Standards Track                    [Page 25]

RFC 2461              Neighbor Discovery for IPv6          December 1998


4.5.  Redirect Message Format

  Routers send Redirect packets to inform a host of a better first-hop
  node on the path to a destination.  Hosts can be redirected to a
  better first-hop router but can also be informed by a redirect that
  the destination is in fact a neighbor.  The latter is accomplished by
  setting the ICMP Target Address equal to the ICMP Destination
  Address.

      0                   1                   2                   3
      0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1
     +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
     |     Type      |     Code      |          Checksum             |
     +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
     |                           Reserved                            |
     +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
     |                                                               |
     +                                                               +
     |                                                               |
     +                       Target Address                          +
     |                                                               |
     +                                                               +
     |                                                               |
     +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
     |                                                               |
     +                                                               +
     |                                                               |
     +                     Destination Address                       +
     |                                                               |
     +                                                               +
     |                                                               |
     +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
     |   Options ...
     +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-

  IP Fields:

     Source Address
                    MUST be the link-local address assigned to the
                    interface from which this message is sent.

     Destination Address
                    The Source Address of the packet that triggered the
                    redirect.

     Hop Limit      255





Narten, et. al.             Standards Track                    [Page 26]

RFC 2461              Neighbor Discovery for IPv6          December 1998


     Authentication Header
                    If a Security Association for the IP Authentication
                    Header exists between the sender and the
                    destination address, then the sender SHOULD include
                    this header.

  ICMP Fields:

     Type           137

     Code           0

     Checksum       The ICMP checksum.  See [ICMPv6].

     Reserved       This field is unused.  It MUST be initialized to
                    zero by the sender and MUST be ignored by the
                    receiver.

     Target Address An IP address that is a better first hop to use for
                    the ICMP Destination Address.  When the target is
                    the actual endpoint of communication, i.e., the
                    destination is a neighbor, the Target Address field
                    MUST contain the same value as the ICMP Destination
                    Address field.  Otherwise the target is a better
                    first-hop router and the Target Address MUST be the
                    router's link-local address so that hosts can
                    uniquely identify routers.

     Destination Address
                    The IP address of the destination which is
                    redirected to the target.

  Possible options:

     Target link-layer address
                    The link-layer address for the target.  It SHOULD
                    be included (if known).  Note that on NBMA links,
                    hosts may rely on the presence of the Target Link-
                    Layer Address option in Redirect messages as the
                    means for determining the link-layer addresses of
                    neighbors.  In such cases, the option MUST be
                    included in Redirect messages.

     Redirected Header
                    As much as possible of the IP packet that triggered
                    the sending of the Redirect without making the
                    redirect packet exceed 1280 octets.




Narten, et. al.             Standards Track                    [Page 27]

RFC 2461              Neighbor Discovery for IPv6          December 1998


4.6.  Option Formats

  Neighbor Discovery messages include zero or more options, some of
  which may appear multiple times in the same message.  All options are
  of the form:

       0                   1                   2                   3
       0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1
      +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
      |     Type      |    Length     |              ...              |
      +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
      ~                              ...                              ~
      +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+

  Fields:

     Type           8-bit identifier of the type of option.  The
                    options defined in this document are:

                          Option Name                             Type

                       Source Link-Layer Address                    1
                       Target Link-Layer Address                    2
                       Prefix Information                           3
                       Redirected Header                            4
                       MTU                                          5


     Length         8-bit unsigned integer.  The length of the option
                    (including the type and length fields) in units of
                    8 octets.  The value 0 is invalid.  Nodes MUST
                    silently discard an ND packet that contains an
                    option with length zero.

4.6.1.  Source/Target Link-layer Address

     0                   1                   2                   3
     0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1
    +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
    |     Type      |    Length     |    Link-Layer Address ...
    +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+

  Fields:

     Type
                    1 for Source Link-layer Address
                    2 for Target Link-layer Address




Narten, et. al.             Standards Track                    [Page 28]

RFC 2461              Neighbor Discovery for IPv6          December 1998


     Length         The length of the option (including the type and
                    length fields) in units of 8 octets.  For example,
                    the length for IEEE 802 addresses is 1 [IPv6-
                    ETHER].

     Link-Layer Address
                    The variable length link-layer address.

                    The content and format of this field (including
                    byte and bit ordering) is expected to be specified
                    in specific documents that describe how IPv6
                    operates over different link layers.  For instance,
                    [IPv6-ETHER].

  Description
                    The Source Link-Layer Address option contains the
                    link-layer address of the sender of the packet.  It
                    is used in the Neighbor Solicitation, Router
                    Solicitation, and Router Advertisement packets.

                    The Target Link-Layer Address option contains the
                    link-layer address of the target.  It is used in
                    Neighbor Advertisement and Redirect packets.

                    These options MUST be silently ignored for other
                    Neighbor Discovery messages.

4.6.2.  Prefix Information

      0                   1                   2                   3
      0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1
     +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
     |     Type      |    Length     | Prefix Length |L|A| Reserved1 |
     +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
     |                         Valid Lifetime                        |
     +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
     |                       Preferred Lifetime                      |
     +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
     |                           Reserved2                           |
     +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
     |                                                               |
     +                                                               +
     |                                                               |
     +                            Prefix                             +
     |                                                               |
     +                                                               +
     |                                                               |
     +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+



Narten, et. al.             Standards Track                    [Page 29]

RFC 2461              Neighbor Discovery for IPv6          December 1998


  Fields:

     Type           3

     Length         4

     Prefix Length  8-bit unsigned integer.  The number of leading bits
                    in the Prefix that are valid.  The value ranges
                    from 0 to 128.

     L              1-bit on-link flag.  When set, indicates that this
                    prefix can be used for on-link determination.  When
                    not set the advertisement makes no statement about
                    on-link or off-link properties of the prefix.  For
                    instance, the prefix might be used for address
                    configuration with some of the addresses belonging
                    to the prefix being on-link and others being off-
                    link.

     A              1-bit autonomous address-configuration flag.  When
                    set indicates that this prefix can be used for
                    autonomous address configuration as specified in
                    [ADDRCONF].

     Reserved1      6-bit unused field.  It MUST be initialized to zero
                    by the sender and MUST be ignored by the receiver.

     Valid Lifetime
                    32-bit unsigned integer.  The length of time in
                    seconds (relative to the time the packet is sent)
                    that the prefix is valid for the purpose of on-link
                    determination.  A value of all one bits
                    (0xffffffff) represents infinity.  The Valid
                    Lifetime is also used by [ADDRCONF].

     Preferred Lifetime
                    32-bit unsigned integer.  The length of time in
                    seconds (relative to the time the packet is sent)
                    that addresses generated from the prefix via
                    stateless address autoconfiguration remain
                    preferred [ADDRCONF].  A value of all one bits
                    (0xffffffff) represents infinity.  See [ADDRCONF].

     Reserved2      This field is unused.  It MUST be initialized to
                    zero by the sender and MUST be ignored by the
                    receiver.





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     Prefix         An IP address or a prefix of an IP address.  The
                    Prefix Length field contains the number of valid
                    leading bits in the prefix.  The bits in the prefix
                    after the prefix length are reserved and MUST be
                    initialized to zero by the sender and ignored by
                    the receiver.  A router SHOULD NOT send a prefix
                    option for the link-local prefix and a host SHOULD
                    ignore such a prefix option.

  Description
                    The Prefix Information option provide hosts with
                    on-link prefixes and prefixes for Address
                    Autoconfiguration.

                    The Prefix Information option appears in Router
                    Advertisement packets and MUST be silently ignored
                    for other messages.

4.6.3.  Redirected Header

      0                   1                   2                   3
      0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1
     +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
     |     Type      |    Length     |            Reserved           |
     +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
     |                           Reserved                            |
     +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
     |                                                               |
     ~                       IP header + data                        ~
     |                                                               |
     +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+

  Fields:

     Type           4

     Length         The length of the option in units of 8 octets.

     Reserved       These fields are unused.  They MUST be initialized
                    to zero by the sender and MUST be ignored by the
                    receiver.

     IP header + data
                    The original packet truncated to ensure that the
                    size of the redirect message does not exceed 1280
                    octets.





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  Description
                    The Redirected Header option is used in Redirect
                    messages and contains all or part of the packet
                    that is being redirected.

                    This option MUST be silently ignored for other
                    Neighbor Discovery messages.

4.6.4.  MTU

      0                   1                   2                   3
      0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1
     +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
     |     Type      |    Length     |           Reserved            |
     +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
     |                              MTU                              |
     +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+

  Fields:

     Type           5

     Length         1

     Reserved       This field is unused.  It MUST be initialized to
                    zero by the sender and MUST be ignored by the
                    receiver.

     MTU            32-bit unsigned integer.  The recommended MTU for
                    the link.

  Description
                    The MTU option is used in  Router Advertisement
                    messages to insure that all nodes on a link use the
                    same MTU value in those cases where the link MTU is
                    not well known.

                    This option MUST be silently ignored for other
                    Neighbor Discovery messages.

                    In configurations in which heterogeneous
                    technologies are bridged together, the maximum
                    supported MTU may differ from one segment to
                    another.  If the bridges do not generate ICMP
                    Packet Too Big messages, communicating nodes will
                    be unable to use Path MTU to dynamically determine
                    the appropriate MTU on a per-neighbor basis.  In
                    such cases, routers use the MTU option to specify



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                    the maximum MTU value that is supported by all
                    segments.

5.  CONCEPTUAL MODEL OF A HOST

  This section describes a conceptual model of one possible data
  structure organization that hosts (and to some extent routers) will
  maintain in interacting with neighboring nodes.  The described
  organization is provided to facilitate the explanation of how the
  Neighbor Discovery protocol should behave.  This document does not
  mandate that implementations adhere to this model as long as their
  external behavior is consistent with that described in this document.

  This model is only concerned with the aspects of host behavior
  directly related to Neighbor Discovery.  In particular, it does not
  concern itself with such issues as source address selection or the
  selecting of an outgoing interface on a multihomed host.

5.1.  Conceptual Data Structures

  Hosts will need to maintain the following pieces of information for
  each interface:

     Neighbor Cache
                  - A set of entries about individual neighbors to
                    which traffic has been sent recently.  Entries are
                    keyed on the neighbor's on-link unicast IP address
                    and contain such information as its link-layer
                    address, a flag indicating whether the neighbor is
                    a router or a host (called IsRouter in this
                    document), a pointer to any queued packets waiting
                    for address resolution to complete, etc.

                    A Neighbor Cache entry also contains information
                    used by the Neighbor Unreachability Detection
                    algorithm, including the reachability state, the
                    number of unanswered probes, and the time the next
                    Neighbor Unreachability Detection event is
                    scheduled to take place.

     Destination Cache
                  - A set of entries about destinations to which
                    traffic has been sent recently.  The Destination
                    Cache includes both on-link and off-link
                    destinations and provides a level of indirection
                    into the Neighbor Cache; the Destination Cache maps
                    a destination IP address to the IP address of the
                    next-hop neighbor.  This cache is updated with



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                    information learned from Redirect messages.
                    Implementations may find it convenient to store
                    additional information not directly related to
                    Neighbor Discovery in Destination Cache entries,
                    such as the Path MTU (PMTU) and round trip timers
                    maintained by transport protocols.

     Prefix List  - A list of the prefixes that define a set of
                    addresses that are on-link.  Prefix List entries
                    are created from information received in Router
                    Advertisements.  Each entry has an associated
                    invalidation timer value (extracted from the
                    advertisement) used to expire prefixes when they
                    become invalid.  A special "infinity" timer value
                    specifies that a prefix remains valid forever,
                    unless a new (finite) value is received in a
                    subsequent advertisement.

                    The link-local prefix is considered to be on the
                    prefix list with an infinite invalidation timer
                    regardless of whether routers are advertising a
                    prefix for it.  Received Router Advertisements
                    SHOULD NOT modify the invalidation timer for the
                    link-local prefix.

     Default Router List
                  - A list of routers to which packets may be sent.
                    Router list entries point to entries in the
                    Neighbor Cache; the algorithm for selecting a
                    default router favors routers known to be reachable
                    over those whose reachability is suspect.  Each
                    entry also has an associated invalidation timer
                    value (extracted from Router Advertisements) used
                    to delete entries that are no longer advertised.

  Note that the above conceptual data structures can be implemented
  using a variety of techniques.  One possible implementation is to use
  a single longest-match routing table for all of the above data
  structures.  Regardless of the specific implementation, it is
  critical that the Neighbor Cache entry for a router is shared by all
  Destination Cache entries using that router in order to prevent
  redundant Neighbor Unreachability Detection probes.

  Note also that other protocols (e.g., IPv6 Mobility) might add
  additional conceptual data structures.  An implementation is at
  liberty to implement such data structures in any way it pleases.  For
  example, an implementation could merge all conceptual data structures
  into a single routing table.



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  The Neighbor Cache contains information maintained by the Neighbor
  Unreachability Detection algorithm.  A key piece of information is a
  neighbor's reachability state, which is one of five possible values.
  The following definitions are informal; precise definitions can be
  found in Section 7.3.2.

     INCOMPLETE  Address resolution is in progress and the link-layer
                 address of the neighbor has not yet been determined.

     REACHABLE   Roughly speaking, the neighbor is known to have been
                 reachable recently (within tens of seconds ago).

     STALE       The neighbor is no longer known to be reachable but
                 until traffic is sent to the neighbor, no attempt
                 should be made to verify its reachability.

     DELAY       The neighbor is no longer known to be reachable, and
                 traffic has recently been sent to the neighbor.
                 Rather than probe the neighbor immediately, however,
                 delay sending probes for a short while in order to
                 give upper layer protocols a chance to provide
                 reachability confirmation.

     PROBE       The neighbor is no longer known to be reachable, and
                 unicast Neighbor Solicitation probes are being sent to
                 verify reachability.

5.2.  Conceptual Sending Algorithm

  When sending a packet to a destination, a node uses a combination of
  the Destination Cache, the Prefix List, and the Default Router List
  to determine the IP address of the appropriate next hop, an operation
  known as "next-hop determination".  Once the IP address of the next
  hop is known, the Neighbor Cache is consulted for link-layer
  information about that neighbor.

  Next-hop determination for a given unicast destination operates as
  follows.  The sender performs a longest prefix match against the
  Prefix List to determine whether the packet's destination is on- or
  off-link.  If the destination is on-link, the next-hop address is the
  same as the packet's destination address.  Otherwise, the sender
  selects a router from the Default Router List (following the rules
  described in Section 6.3.6).  If the Default Router List is empty,
  the sender assumes that the destination is on-link.

  For efficiency reasons, next-hop determination is not performed on
  every packet that is sent.  Instead, the results of next-hop
  determination computations are saved in the Destination Cache (which



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  also contains updates learned from Redirect messages).  When the
  sending node has a packet to send, it first examines the Destination
  Cache.  If no entry exists for the destination, next-hop
  determination is invoked to create a Destination Cache entry.

  Once the IP address of the next-hop node is known, the sender
  examines the Neighbor Cache for link-layer information about that
  neighbor.  If no entry exists, the sender creates one, sets its state
  to INCOMPLETE, initiates Address Resolution, and then queues the data
  packet pending completion of address resolution.  For multicast-
  capable interfaces Address Resolution consists of sending a Neighbor
  Solicitation message and waiting for a Neighbor Advertisement.  When
  a Neighbor Advertisement response is received, the link-layer
  addresses is entered in the Neighbor Cache entry and the queued
  packet is transmitted.  The address resolution mechanism is described
  in detail in Section 7.2.

  For multicast packets the next-hop is always the (multicast)
  destination address and is considered to be on-link.  The procedure
  for determining the link-layer address corresponding to a given IP
  multicast address can be found in a separate document that covers
  operating IP over a particular link type (e.g., [IPv6-ETHER]).

  Each time a Neighbor Cache entry is accessed while transmitting a
  unicast packet, the sender checks Neighbor Unreachability Detection
  related information according to the Neighbor Unreachability
  Detection algorithm (Section 7.3).  This unreachability check might
  result in the sender transmitting a unicast Neighbor Solicitation to
  verify that the neighbor is still reachable.

  Next-hop determination is done the first time traffic is sent to a
  destination.  As long as subsequent communication to that destination
  proceeds successfully, the Destination Cache entry continues to be
  used.  If at some point communication ceases to proceed, as
  determined by the Neighbor Unreachability Detection algorithm, next-
  hop determination may need to be performed again.  For example,
  traffic through a failed router should be switched to a working
  router.  Likewise, it may be possible to reroute traffic destined for
  a mobile node to a "mobility agent".

  Note that when a node redoes next-hop determination there is no need
  to discard the complete Destination Cache entry.  In fact, it is
  generally beneficial to retain such cached information as the PMTU
  and round trip timer values that may also be kept in the Destination
  Cache entry.






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  Routers and multihomed hosts have multiple interfaces.  The remainder
  of this document assumes that all sent and received Neighbor
  Discovery messages refer to the interface of appropriate context.
  For example, when responding to a Router Solicitation, the
  corresponding Router Advertisement is sent out the interface on which
  the solicitation was received.

5.3.  Garbage Collection and Timeout Requirements

  The conceptual data structures described above use different
  mechanisms for discarding potentially stale or unused information.

  From the perspective of correctness there is no need to periodically
  purge Destination and Neighbor Cache entries.  Although stale
  information can potentially remain in the cache indefinitely, the
  Neighbor Unreachability Detection algorithm ensures that stale
  information is purged quickly if it is actually being used.

  To limit the storage needed for the Destination and Neighbor Caches,
  a node may need to garbage-collect old entries.  However, care must
  be taken to insure that sufficient space is always present to hold
  the working set of active entries.  A small cache may result in an
  excessive number of Neighbor Discovery messages if entries are
  discarded and rebuilt in quick succession.  Any LRU-based policy that
  only reclaims entries that have not been used in some time (e.g., ten
  minutes or more) should be adequate for garbage-collecting unused
  entries.

  A node should retain entries in the Default Router List and the
  Prefix List until their lifetimes expire.  However, a node may
  garbage collect entries prematurely if it is low on memory.  If not
  all routers are kept on the Default Router list, a node should retain
  at least two entries in the Default Router List (and preferably more)
  in order to maintain robust connectivity for off-link destinations.

  When removing an entry from the Prefix List there is no need to purge
  any entries from the Destination or Neighbor Caches.  Neighbor
  Unreachability Detection will efficiently purge any entries in these
  caches that have become invalid.  When removing an entry from the
  Default Router List, however, any entries in the Destination Cache
  that go through that router must perform next-hop determination again
  to select a new default router.

6.  ROUTER AND PREFIX DISCOVERY

  This section describes router and host behavior related to the Router
  Discovery portion of Neighbor Discovery.  Router Discovery is used to
  locate neighboring routers as well as learn prefixes and



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  configuration parameters related to address autoconfiguration.

  Prefix Discovery is the process through which hosts learn the ranges
  of IP addresses that reside on-link and can be reached directly
  without going through a router.  Routers send Router Advertisements
  that indicate whether the sender is willing to be a default router.
  Router Advertisements also contain Prefix Information options that
  list the set of prefixes that identify on-link IP addresses.

  Stateless Address Autoconfiguration must also obtain subnet prefixes
  as part of configuring addresses.  Although the prefixes used for
  address autoconfiguration are logically distinct from those used for
  on-link determination, autoconfiguration information is piggybacked
  on Router Discovery messages to reduce network traffic.  Indeed, the
  same prefixes can be advertised for on-link determination and address
  autoconfiguration by specifying the appropriate flags in the Prefix
  Information options.  See [ADDRCONF] for details on how
  autoconfiguration information is processed.

6.1.  Message Validation

6.1.1.  Validation of Router Solicitation Messages

  Hosts MUST silently discard any received Router Solicitation
  Messages.

  A router MUST silently discard any received Router Solicitation
  messages that do not satisfy all of the following validity checks:

     - The IP Hop Limit field has a value of 255, i.e., the packet
       could not possibly have been forwarded by a router.

     - If the message includes an IP Authentication Header, the message
       authenticates correctly.

     - ICMP Checksum is valid.

     - ICMP Code is 0.

     - ICMP length (derived from the IP length) is 8 or more octets.

     - All included options have a length that is greater than zero.

     - If the IP source address is the unspecified address, there is no
       source link-layer address option in the message.






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  The contents of the Reserved field, and of any unrecognized options,
  MUST be ignored.  Future, backward-compatible changes to the protocol
  may specify the contents of the Reserved field or add new options;
  backward-incompatible changes may use different Code values.

  The contents of any defined options that are not specified to be used
  with Router Solicitation messages MUST be ignored and the packet
  processed as normal.  The only defined option that may appear is the
  Source Link-Layer Address option.

  A solicitation that passes the validity checks is called a "valid
  solicitation".

6.1.2.  Validation of Router Advertisement Messages

  A node MUST silently discard any received Router Advertisement
  messages that do not satisfy all of the following validity checks:

     - IP Source Address is a link-local address.  Routers must use
       their link-local address as the source for Router Advertisement
       and Redirect messages so that hosts can uniquely identify
       routers.

     - The IP Hop Limit field has a value of 255, i.e., the packet
       could not possibly have been forwarded by a router.

     - If the message includes an IP Authentication Header, the message
       authenticates correctly.

     - ICMP Checksum is valid.

     - ICMP Code is 0.

     - ICMP length (derived from the IP length) is 16 or more octets.

     - All included options have a length that is greater than zero.

  The contents of the Reserved field, and of any unrecognized options,
  MUST be ignored.  Future, backward-compatible changes to the protocol
  may specify the contents of the Reserved field or add new options;
  backward-incompatible changes may use different Code values.

  The contents of any defined options that are not specified to be used
  with Router Advertisement messages MUST be ignored and the packet
  processed as normal.  The only defined options that may appear are
  the Source Link-Layer Address, Prefix Information and MTU options.





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  An advertisement that passes the validity checks is called a "valid
  advertisement".

6.2.  Router Specification

6.2.1.  Router Configuration Variables

  A router MUST allow for the following conceptual variables to be
  configured by system management.  The specific variable names are
  used for demonstration purposes only, and an implementation is not
  required to have them, so long as its external behavior is consistent
  with that described in this document.  Default values are specified
  to simplify configuration in common cases.

  The default values for some of the variables listed below may be
  overridden by specific documents that describe how IPv6 operates over
  different link layers.  This rule simplifies the configuration of
  Neighbor Discovery over link types with widely differing performance
  characteristics.

  For each multicast interface:

     AdvSendAdvertisements
                    A flag indicating whether or not the router sends
                    periodic Router Advertisements and responds to
                    Router Solicitations.

                    Default: FALSE

                    Note that AdvSendAdvertisements MUST be FALSE by
                    default so that a node will not accidentally start
                    acting as a router unless it is explicitly
                    configured by system management to send Router
                    Advertisements.

     MaxRtrAdvInterval
                    The maximum time allowed between sending
                    unsolicited multicast Router Advertisements from
                    the interface, in seconds.  MUST be no less than 4
                    seconds and no greater than 1800 seconds.

                    Default: 600 seconds

     MinRtrAdvInterval
                    The minimum time allowed between sending
                    unsolicited multicast Router Advertisements from
                    the interface, in seconds.  MUST be no less than 3
                    seconds and no greater than .75 *



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                    MaxRtrAdvInterval.

                    Default: 0.33 * MaxRtrAdvInterval

     AdvManagedFlag
                    The TRUE/FALSE value to be placed in the "Managed
                    address configuration" flag field in the Router
                    Advertisement.  See [ADDRCONF].

                    Default: FALSE

     AdvOtherConfigFlag
                    The TRUE/FALSE value to be placed in the "Other
                    stateful configuration" flag field in the Router
                    Advertisement.  See [ADDRCONF].

                    Default: FALSE

     AdvLinkMTU     The value to be placed in MTU options sent by the
                    router.  A value of zero indicates that no MTU
                    options are sent.

                    Default: 0

     AdvReachableTime
                    The value to be placed in the Reachable Time field
                    in the Router Advertisement messages sent by the
                    router.  The value zero means unspecified (by this
                    router).  MUST be no greater than 3,600,000
                    milliseconds (1 hour).

                    Default: 0

     AdvRetransTimer The value to be placed in the Retrans Timer field
                    in the Router Advertisement messages sent by the
                    router.  The value zero means unspecified (by this
                    router).

                    Default: 0

     AdvCurHopLimit
                    The default value to be placed in the Cur Hop Limit
                    field in the Router Advertisement messages sent by
                    the router.  The value should be set to that
                    current diameter of the Internet.  The value zero
                    means unspecified (by this router).





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                    Default:  The value specified in the "Assigned
                    Numbers" RFC [ASSIGNED] that was in effect at the
                    time of implementation.

     AdvDefaultLifetime
                    The value to be placed in the Router Lifetime field
                    of Router Advertisements sent from the interface,
                    in seconds.  MUST be either zero or between
                    MaxRtrAdvInterval and 9000 seconds.  A value of
                    zero indicates that the router is not to be used as
                    a default router.

                    Default: 3 * MaxRtrAdvInterval

     AdvPrefixList
                    A list of prefixes to be placed in Prefix
                    Information options in Router Advertisement
                    messages sent from the interface.

                    Default: all prefixes that the router advertises
                    via routing protocols as being on-link for the
                    interface from which the advertisement is sent.
                    The link-local prefix SHOULD NOT be included in the
                    list of advertised prefixes.

                    Each prefix has an associated:

                       AdvValidLifetime
                            The value to be placed in the Valid
                            Lifetime in the Prefix Information
                            option, in seconds.  The designated value
                            of all 1's (0xffffffff) represents
                            infinity.  Implementations MUST allow
                            AdvValidLifetime to be specified in two
                            ways:

                              - a time that decrements in real time,
                                that is, one that will result in a
                                Lifetime of zero at the specified
                                time in the future, or

                              - a fixed time that stays the same in
                                consecutive advertisements.

                            Default: 2592000 seconds (30 days), fixed
                            (i.e., stays the same in consecutive
                            advertisements).




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                       AdvOnLinkFlag
                            The value to be placed in the on-link
                            flag ("L-bit") field in the Prefix
                            Information option.

                            Default: TRUE

                  Automatic address configuration [ADDRCONF]
                  defines additional information associated with
                  each the prefixes:

                       AdvPreferredLifetime
                            The value to be placed in the Preferred
                            Lifetime in the Prefix Information
                            option, in seconds.  The designated value
                            of all 1's (0xffffffff) represents
                            infinity.  See [ADDRCONF] for details on
                            how this value is used.  Implementations
                            MUST allow AdvPreferredLifetime to be
                            specified in two ways:

                              - a time that decrements in real time,
                                that is, one that will result in a
                                Lifetime of zero at a specified time
                                in the future, or

                              - a fixed time that stays the same in
                                consecutive advertisements.

                            Default: 604800 seconds (7 days), fixed
                            (i.e., stays the same in consecutive
                            advertisements).

                       AdvAutonomousFlag
                            The value to be placed in the Autonomous
                            Flag field in the Prefix Information
                            option.  See [ADDRCONF].

                            Default: TRUE

  The above variables contain information that is placed in outgoing
  Router Advertisement messages.  Hosts use the received information to
  initialize a set of analogous variables that control their external
  behavior (see Section 6.3.2).  Some of these host variables (e.g.,
  CurHopLimit, RetransTimer, and ReachableTime) apply to all nodes
  including routers.  In practice, these variables may not actually be
  present on routers, since their contents can be derived from the
  variables described above.  However, external router behavior MUST be



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  the same as host behavior with respect to these variables.  In
  particular, this includes the occasional randomization of the
  ReachableTime value as described in Section 6.3.2.

  Protocol constants are defined in Section 10.

6.2.2.  Becoming An Advertising Interface

  The term "advertising interface" refers to any functioning and
  enabled multicast interface that has at least one unicast IP address
  assigned to it and whose corresponding AdvSendAdvertisements flag is
  TRUE.  A router MUST NOT send Router Advertisements out any interface
  that is not an advertising interface.

  An interface may become an advertising interface at times other than
  system startup.  For example:

     - changing the AdvSendAdvertisements flag on an enabled interface
       from FALSE to TRUE, or

     - administratively enabling the interface, if it had been
       administratively disabled, and its AdvSendAdvertisements flag is
       TRUE, or

     - enabling IP forwarding capability (i.e., changing the system
       from being a host to being a router), when the interface's
       AdvSendAdvertisements flag is TRUE.

  A router MUST join the all-routers multicast address on an
  advertising interface.  Routers respond to Router Solicitations sent
  to the all-routers address and verify the consistency of Router
  Advertisements sent by neighboring routers.

6.2.3.  Router Advertisement Message Content

  A router sends periodic as well as solicited Router Advertisements
  out its advertising interfaces.  Outgoing Router Advertisements are
  filled with the following values consistent with the message format
  given in Section 4.2:

     - In the Router Lifetime field: the interface's configured
       AdvDefaultLifetime.

     - In the M and O flags: the interface's configured AdvManagedFlag
       and AdvOtherConfigFlag, respectively.  See [ADDRCONF].

     - In the Cur Hop Limit field: the interface's configured
       CurHopLimit.



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     - In the Reachable Time field: the interface's configured
       AdvReachableTime.

     - In the Retrans Timer field: the interface's configured
       AdvRetransTimer.

     - In the options:

          o Source Link-Layer Address option: link-layer address of the
            sending interface.  This option MAY be omitted to
            facilitate in-bound load balancing over replicated
            interfaces.

          o MTU option: the interface's configured AdvLinkMTU value if
            the value is non-zero.  If AdvLinkMTU is zero the MTU
            option is not sent.

          o Prefix Information options: one Prefix Information option
            for each prefix listed in AdvPrefixList with the option
            fields set from the information in the AdvPrefixList entry
            as follows:

               - In the "on-link" flag: the entry's AdvOnLinkFlag.

               - In the Valid Lifetime field: the entry's
                 AdvValidLifetime.

               - In the "Autonomous address configuration" flag: the
                 entry's AdvAutonomousFlag.

               - In the Preferred Lifetime field: the entry's
                 AdvPreferredLifetime.

  A router might want to send Router Advertisements without advertising
  itself as a default router.  For instance, a router might advertise
  prefixes for address autoconfiguration while not wishing to forward
  packets.  Such a router sets the Router Lifetime field in outgoing
  advertisements to zero.

  A router MAY choose not to include some or all options when sending
  unsolicited Router Advertisements.  For example, if prefix lifetimes
  are much longer than AdvDefaultLifetime, including them every few
  advertisements may be sufficient.  However, when responding to a
  Router Solicitation or while sending the first few initial
  unsolicited advertisements, a router SHOULD include all options so
  that all information (e.g., prefixes) is propagated quickly during
  system initialization.




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  If including all options causes the size of an advertisement to
  exceed the link MTU, multiple advertisements can be sent, each
  containing a subset of the options.

6.2.4.  Sending Unsolicited Router Advertisements

  A host MUST NOT send Router Advertisement messages at any time.

  Unsolicited Router Advertisements are not strictly periodic: the
  interval between subsequent transmissions is randomized to reduce the
  probability of synchronization with the advertisements from other
  routers on the same link [SYNC].  Each advertising interface has its
  own timer.  Whenever a multicast advertisement is sent from an
  interface, the timer is reset to a uniformly-distributed random value
  between the interface's configured MinRtrAdvInterval and
  MaxRtrAdvInterval; expiration of the timer causes the next
  advertisement to be sent and a new random value to be chosen.

  For the first few advertisements (up to
  MAX_INITIAL_RTR_ADVERTISEMENTS) sent from an interface when it
  becomes an advertising interface, if the randomly chosen interval is
  greater than MAX_INITIAL_RTR_ADVERT_INTERVAL, the timer SHOULD be set
  to MAX_INITIAL_RTR_ADVERT_INTERVAL instead.  Using a smaller interval
  for the initial advertisements increases the likelihood of a router
  being discovered quickly when it first becomes available, in the
  presence of possible packet loss.

  The information contained in Router Advertisements may change through
  actions of system management.  For instance, the lifetime of
  advertised prefixes may change, new prefixes could be added, a router
  could cease to be a router (i.e., switch from being a router to being
  a host), etc.  In such cases, the router MAY transmit up to
  MAX_INITIAL_RTR_ADVERTISEMENTS unsolicited advertisements, using the
  same rules as when an interface becomes an advertising interface.

6.2.5.  Ceasing To Be An Advertising Interface

  An interface may cease to be an advertising interface, through
  actions of system management such as:

     - changing the AdvSendAdvertisements flag of an enabled interface
       from TRUE to FALSE, or

     - administratively disabling the interface, or

     - shutting down the system.





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  In such cases the router SHOULD transmit one or more (but not more
  than MAX_FINAL_RTR_ADVERTISEMENTS) final multicast Router
  Advertisements on the interface with a Router Lifetime field of zero.
  In the case of a router becoming a host, the system SHOULD also
  depart from the all-routers IP multicast group on all interfaces on
  which the router supports IP multicast (whether or not they had been
  advertising interfaces).  In addition, the host MUST insure that
  subsequent Neighbor Advertisement messages sent from the interface
  have the Router flag set to zero.

  Note that system management may disable a router's IP forwarding
  capability (i.e., changing the system from being a router to being a
  host), a step that does not necessarily imply that the router's
  interfaces stop being advertising interfaces.  In such cases,
  subsequent Router Advertisements MUST set the Router Lifetime field
  to zero.

6.2.6.  Processing Router Solicitations

  A host MUST silently discard any received Router Solicitation
  messages.

  In addition to sending periodic, unsolicited advertisements, a router
  sends advertisements in response to valid solicitations received on
  an advertising interface.  A router MAY choose to unicast the
  response directly to the soliciting host's address (if the
  solicitation's source address is not the unspecified address), but
  the usual case is to multicast the response to the all-nodes group.
  In the latter case, the interface's interval timer is reset to a new
  random value, as if an unsolicited advertisement had just been sent
  (see Section 6.2.4).

  In all cases, Router Advertisements sent in response to a Router
  Solicitation MUST be delayed by a random time between 0 and
  MAX_RA_DELAY_TIME seconds. (If a single advertisement is sent in
  response to multiple solicitations, the delay is relative to the
  first solicitation.)  In addition, consecutive Router Advertisements
  sent to the all-nodes multicast address MUST be rate limited to no
  more than one advertisement every MIN_DELAY_BETWEEN_RAS seconds.

  A router might process Router Solicitations as follows:

   - Upon receipt of a Router Solicitation, compute a random delay
     within the range 0 through MAX_RA_DELAY_TIME.  If the computed
     value corresponds to a time later than the time the next multicast
     Router Advertisement is scheduled to be sent, ignore the random
     delay and send the advertisement at the already-scheduled time.




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   - If the router sent a multicast Router Advertisement (solicited or
     unsolicited) within the last MIN_DELAY_BETWEEN_RAS seconds,
     schedule the advertisement to be sent at a time corresponding to
     MIN_DELAY_BETWEEN_RAS plus the random value after the previous
     advertisement was sent.  This ensures that the multicast Router
     Advertisements are rate limited.

   - Otherwise, schedule the sending of a Router Advertisement at the
     time given by the random value.

  Note that a router is permitted to send multicast Router
  Advertisements more frequently than indicated by the
  MinRtrAdvInterval configuration variable so long as the more frequent
  advertisements are responses to Router Solicitations.  In all cases,
  however, unsolicited multicast advertisements MUST NOT be sent more
  frequently than indicated by MinRtrAdvInterval.

  Router Solicitations in which the Source Address is the unspecified
  address MUST NOT update the router's Neighbor Cache; solicitations
  with a proper source address update the Neighbor Cache as follows. If
  the router already has a Neighbor Cache entry for the solicitation's
  sender, the solicitation contains a Source Link-Layer Address option,
  and the received link-layer address differs from that already in the
  cache, the link-layer address SHOULD be updated in the appropriate
  Neighbor Cache entry, and its reachability state MUST also be set to
  STALE.  If there is no existing Neighbor Cache entry for the
  solicitation's sender, the router creates one, installs the link-
  layer address and sets its reachability state to STALE as specified
  in Section 7.3.3.  Whether or not a Source Link-Layer Address option
  is provided, if a Neighbor Cache entry for the solicitation's sender
  exists (or is created) the entry's IsRouter flag MUST be set to
  FALSE.

6.2.7.  Router Advertisement Consistency

  Routers SHOULD inspect valid Router Advertisements sent by other
  routers and verify that the routers are advertising consistent
  information on a link.  Detected inconsistencies indicate that one or
  more routers might be misconfigured and SHOULD be logged to system or
  network management.  The minimum set of information to check
  includes:

   - Cur Hop Limit values (except for the unspecified value of zero).

   - Values of the M or O flags.

   - Reachable Time values (except for the unspecified value of zero).




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   - Retrans Timer values (except for the unspecified value of zero).

   - Values in the MTU options.

   - Preferred and Valid Lifetimes for the same prefix.  If
     AdvPreferredLifetime and/or AdvValidLifetime decrement in real
     time as specified in section 6.2.7 then the comparison of the
     lifetimes can not compare the content of the fields in the Router
     Advertisement but must instead compare the time at which the
     prefix will become deprecated and invalidated, respectively.  Due
     to link propagation delays and potentially poorly synchronized
     clocks between the routers such comparison SHOULD allow some time
     skew.

  Note that it is not an error for different routers to advertise
  different sets of prefixes.  Also, some routers might leave some
  fields as unspecified, i.e., with the value zero, while other routers
  specify values.  The logging of errors SHOULD be restricted to
  conflicting information that causes hosts to switch from one value to
  another with each received advertisement.

  Any other action on reception of Router Advertisement messages by a
  router is beyond the scope of this document.

6.2.8.  Link-local Address Change

  The link-local address on a router SHOULD change rarely, if ever.
  Nodes receiving Neighbor Discovery messages use the source address to
  identify the sender.  If multiple packets from the same router
  contain different source addresses, nodes will assume they come from
  different routers, leading to undesirable behavior.  For example, a
  node will ignore Redirect messages that are believed to have been
  sent by a router other than the current first-hop router.  Thus the
  source address used in Router Advertisements sent by a particular
  router must be identical to the target address in a Redirect message
  when redirecting to that router.

  Using the link-local address to uniquely identify routers on the link
  has the benefit that the address a router is known by should not
  change when a site renumbers.

  If a router changes the link-local address for one of its interfaces,
  it SHOULD inform hosts of this change.  The router SHOULD multicast a
  few Router Advertisements from the old link-local address with the
  Router Lifetime field set to zero and also multicast a few Router
  Advertisements from the new link-local address.  The overall effect
  should be the same as if one interface ceases being an advertising
  interface, and a different one starts being an advertising interface.



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6.3.  Host Specification

6.3.1.  Host Configuration Variables

  None.

6.3.2.  Host Variables

  A host maintains certain Neighbor Discovery related variables in
  addition to the data structures defined in Section 5.1.  The specific
  variable names are used for demonstration purposes only, and an
  implementation is not required to have them, so long as its external
  behavior is consistent with that described in this document.

  These variables have default values that are overridden by
  information received in Router Advertisement messages.  The default
  values are used when there is no router on the link or when all
  received Router Advertisements have left a particular value
  unspecified.

  The default values in this specification may be overridden by
  specific documents that describe how IP operates over different link
  layers.  This rule allows Neighbor Discovery to operate over links
  with widely varying performance characteristics.

  For each interface:

       LinkMTU        The MTU of the link.
                      Default: The valued defined in the specific
                      document that describes how IPv6 operates over
                      the particular link layer (e.g., [IPv6-ETHER]).

       CurHopLimit    The default hop limit to be used when sending
                      (unicast) IP packets.

                      Default: The value specified in the "Assigned
                      Numbers" RFC [ASSIGNED] that was in effect at the
                      time of implementation.

       BaseReachableTime
                      A base value used for computing the random
                      ReachableTime value.

                      Default: REACHABLE_TIME milliseconds.

       ReachableTime  The time a neighbor is considered reachable after
                      receiving a reachability confirmation.




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                      This value should be a uniformly-distributed
                      random value between MIN_RANDOM_FACTOR and
                      MAX_RANDOM_FACTOR times BaseReachableTime
                      milliseconds.  A new random value should be
                      calculated when BaseReachableTime changes (due to
                      Router Advertisements) or at least every few
                      hours even if no Router Advertisements are
                      received.

       RetransTimer   The time between retransmissions of Neighbor
                      Solicitation messages to a neighbor when
                      resolving the address or when probing the
                      reachability of a neighbor.

                      Default: RETRANS_TIMER milliseconds

6.3.3.  Interface Initialization

  The host joins the all-nodes multicast address on all multicast-
  capable interfaces.

6.3.4.  Processing Received Router Advertisements

  When multiple routers are present, the information advertised
  collectively by all routers may be a superset of the information
  contained in a single Router Advertisement.  Moreover, information
  may also be obtained through other dynamic means, such as stateful
  autoconfiguration.  Hosts accept the union of all received
  information; the receipt of a Router Advertisement MUST NOT
  invalidate all information received in a previous advertisement or
  from another source.  However, when received information for a
  specific parameter (e.g., Link MTU) or option (e.g., Lifetime on a
  specific Prefix) differs from information received earlier, and the
  parameter/option can only have one value, the most recently-received
  information is considered authoritative.

  Some Router Advertisement fields (e.g., Cur Hop Limit, Reachable Time
  and Retrans Timer) may contain a value denoting unspecified.  In such
  cases, the parameter should be ignored and the host should continue
  using whatever value it is already using.  In particular, a host MUST
  NOT interpret the unspecified value as meaning change back to the
  default value that was in use before the first Router Advertisement
  was received.  This rule prevents hosts from continually changing an
  internal variable when one router advertises a specific value, but
  other routers advertise the unspecified value.

  On receipt of a valid Router Advertisement, a host extracts the
  source address of the packet and does the following:



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     - If the address is not already present in the host's Default
       Router List, and the advertisement's Router Lifetime is non-
       zero, create a new entry in the list, and initialize its
       invalidation timer value from the advertisement's Router
       Lifetime field.

     - If the address is already present in the host's Default Router
       List as a result of a previously-received advertisement, reset
       its invalidation timer to the Router Lifetime value in the
       newly-received advertisement.

     - If the address is already present in the host's Default Router
       List and the received Router Lifetime value is zero, immediately
       time-out the entry as specified in Section 6.3.5.

  To limit the storage needed for the Default Router List, a host MAY
  choose not to store all of the router addresses discovered via
  advertisements.  However, a host MUST retain at least two router
  addresses and SHOULD retain more.  Default router selections are made
  whenever communication to a destination appears to be failing.  Thus,
  the more routers on the list, the more likely an alternative working
  router can be found quickly (e.g., without having to wait for the
  next advertisement to arrive).

  If the received Cur Hop Limit value is non-zero the host SHOULD set
  its CurHopLimit variable to the received value.

  If the received Reachable Time value is non-zero the host SHOULD set
  its BaseReachableTime variable to the received value.  If the new
  value differs from the previous value, the host SHOULD recompute a
  new random ReachableTime value.  ReachableTime is computed as a
  uniformly-distributed random value between MIN_RANDOM_FACTOR and
  MAX_RANDOM_FACTOR times the BaseReachableTime.  Using a random
  component eliminates the possibility Neighbor Unreachability
  Detection messages synchronize with each other.

  In most cases, the advertised Reachable Time value will be the same
  in consecutive Router Advertisements and a host's BaseReachableTime
  rarely changes.  In such cases, an implementation SHOULD insure that
  a new random value gets recomputed at least once every few hours.

  The RetransTimer variable SHOULD be copied from the Retrans Timer
  field, if the received value is non-zero.

  After extracting information from the fixed part of the Router
  Advertisement message, the advertisement is scanned for valid
  options.  If the advertisement contains a Source Link-Layer Address
  option the link-layer address SHOULD be recorded in the Neighbor



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  Cache entry for the router (creating an entry if necessary) and the
  IsRouter flag in the Neighbor Cache entry MUST be set to TRUE.  If no
  Source Link-Layer Address is included, but a corresponding Neighbor
  Cache entry exists, its IsRouter flag MUST be set to TRUE.  The
  IsRouter flag is used by Neighbor Unreachability Detection to
  determine when a router changes to being a host (i.e., no longer
  capable of forwarding packets).  If a Neighbor Cache entry is created
  for the router its reachability state MUST be set to STALE as
  specified in Section 7.3.3.  If a cache entry already exists and is
  updated with a different link-layer address the reachability state
  MUST also be set to STALE.

  If the MTU option is present, hosts SHOULD copy the option's value
  into LinkMTU so long as the value is greater than or equal to the
  minimum link MTU [IPv6] and does not exceed the default LinkMTU value
  specified in the link type specific document (e.g., [IPv6-ETHER]).

  Prefix Information options that have the "on-link" (L) flag set
  indicate a prefix identifying a range of addresses that should be
  considered on-link.  Note, however, that a Prefix Information option
  with the on-link flag set to zero conveys no information concerning
  on-link determination and MUST NOT be interpreted to mean that
  addresses covered by the prefix are off-link.  The only way to cancel
  a previous on-link indication is to advertise that prefix with the
  L-bit set and the Lifetime set to zero.  The default behavior (see
  Section 5.2) when sending a packet to an address for which no
  information is known about the on-link status of the address is to
  forward the packet to a default router; the reception of a Prefix
  Information option with the "on-link " (L) flag set to zero does not
  change this behavior.  The reasons for an address being treated as
  on-link is specified in the definition of "on-link" in Section 2.1.
  Prefixes with the on-link flag set to zero would normally have the
  autonomous flag set and be used by [ADDRCONF].

  For each Prefix Information option with the on-link flag set, a host
  does the following:

     - If the prefix is the link-local prefix, silently ignore the
       Prefix Information option.

     - If the prefix is not already present in the Prefix List, and the
       Prefix Information option's Valid Lifetime field is non-zero,
       create a new entry for the prefix and initialize its
       invalidation timer to the Valid Lifetime value in the Prefix
       Information option.

     - If the prefix is already present in the host's Prefix List as
       the result of a previously-received advertisement, reset its



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       invalidation timer to the Valid Lifetime value in the Prefix
       Information option.  If the new Lifetime value is zero, time-out
       the prefix immediately (see Section 6.3.5).

     - If the Prefix Information option's Valid Lifetime field is zero,
       and the prefix is not present in the host's Prefix List,
       silently ignore the option.

  Stateless address autoconfiguration [ADDRCONF] may in some
  circumstances increase the Valid Lifetime of a prefix or ignore it
  completely in order to prevent a particular denial of service attack.
  However, since the effect of the same denial of service targeted at
  the on-link prefix list is not catastrophic (hosts would send packets
  to a default router and receive a redirect rather than sending
  packets directly to a neighbor) the Neighbor Discovery protocol does
  not impose such a check on the prefix lifetime values.

     Note: Implementations can choose to process the on-link aspects of
     the prefixes separately from the address autoconfiguration aspects
     of the prefixes by, e.g., passing a copy of each valid Router
     Advertisement message to both an "on-link" and an "addrconf"
     function.  Each function can then operate independently on the
     prefixes that have the appropriate flag set.

6.3.5.  Timing out Prefixes and Default Routers

  Whenever the invalidation timer expires for a Prefix List entry, that
  entry is discarded.  No existing Destination Cache entries need be
  updated, however.  Should a reachability problem arise with an
  existing Neighbor Cache entry, Neighbor Unreachability Detection will
  perform any needed recovery.

  Whenever the Lifetime of an entry in the Default Router List expires,
  that entry is discarded.  When removing a router from the Default
  Router list, the node MUST update the Destination Cache in such a way
  that all entries using the router perform next-hop determination
  again rather than continue sending traffic to the (deleted) router.

6.3.6.  Default Router Selection

  The algorithm for selecting a router depends in part on whether or
  not a router is known to be reachable.  The exact details of how a
  node keeps track of a neighbor's reachability state are covered in
  Section 7.3.  The algorithm for selecting a default router is invoked
  during next-hop determination when no Destination Cache entry exists
  for an off-link destination or when communication through an existing
  router appears to be failing.  Under normal conditions, a router
  would be selected the first time traffic is sent to a destination,



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  with subsequent traffic for that destination using the same router as
  indicated in the Destination Cache modulo any changes to the
  Destination Cache caused by Redirect messages.

  The policy for selecting routers from the Default Router List is as
  follows:

    1) Routers that are reachable or probably reachable (i.e., in any
       state other than INCOMPLETE) SHOULD be preferred over routers
       whose reachability is unknown or suspect (i.e., in the
       INCOMPLETE state, or for which no Neighbor Cache entry exists).
       An implementation may choose to always return the same router or
       cycle through the router list in a round-robin fashion as long
       as it always returns a reachable or a probably reachable router
       when one is available.

    2) When no routers on the list are known to be reachable or
       probably reachable, routers SHOULD be selected in a round-robin
       fashion, so that subsequent requests for a default router do not
       return the same router until all other routers have been
       selected.

       Cycling through the router list in this case ensures that all
       available routers are actively probed by the Neighbor
       Unreachability Detection algorithm.  A request for a default
       router is made in conjunction with the sending of a packet to a
       router, and the selected router will be probed for reachability
       as a side effect.

    3) If the Default Router List is empty, assume that all
       destinations are on-link as specified in Section 5.2.

6.3.7.  Sending Router Solicitations

  When an interface becomes enabled, a host may be unwilling to wait
  for the next unsolicited Router Advertisement to locate default
  routers or learn prefixes.  To obtain Router Advertisements quickly,
  a host SHOULD transmit up to MAX_RTR_SOLICITATIONS Router
  Solicitation messages each separated by at least
  RTR_SOLICITATION_INTERVAL seconds.  Router Solicitations may be sent
  after any of the following events:

     - The interface is initialized at system startup time.

     - The interface is reinitialized after a temporary interface
       failure or after being temporarily disabled by system
       management.




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     - The system changes from being a router to being a host, by
       having its IP forwarding capability turned off by system
       management.

     - The host attaches to a link for the first time.

     - The host re-attaches to a link after being detached for some
       time.

  A host sends Router Solicitations to the All-Routers multicast
  address.  The IP source address is set to either one of the
  interface's unicast addresses or the unspecified address.  The Source
  Link-Layer Address option SHOULD be set to the host's link-layer
  address, if the IP source address is not the unspecified address.

  Before a host sends an initial solicitation, it SHOULD delay the
  transmission for a random amount of time between 0 and
  MAX_RTR_SOLICITATION_DELAY.  This serves to alleviate congestion when
  many hosts start up on a link at the same time, such as might happen
  after recovery from a power failure.  If a host has already performed
  a random delay since the interface became (re)enabled (e.g., as part
  of Duplicate Address Detection [ADDRCONF]) there is no need to delay
  again before sending the first Router Solicitation message.

  Once the host sends a Router Solicitation, and receives a valid
  Router Advertisement with a non-zero Router Lifetime, the host MUST
  desist from sending additional solicitations on that interface, until
  the next time one of the above events occurs.  Moreover, a host
  SHOULD send at least one solicitation in the case where an
  advertisement is received prior to having sent a solicitation.
  Unsolicited Router Advertisements may be incomplete (see Section
  6.2.3); solicited advertisements are expected to contain complete
  information.

  If a host sends MAX_RTR_SOLICITATIONS solicitations, and receives no
  Router Advertisements after having waited MAX_RTR_SOLICITATION_DELAY
  seconds after sending the last solicitation, the host concludes that
  there are no routers on the link for the purpose of [ADDRCONF].
  However, the host continues to receive and process Router
  Advertisements messages in the event that routers appear on the link.

7.  ADDRESS RESOLUTION AND NEIGHBOR UNREACHABILITY DETECTION

  This section describes the functions related to Neighbor Solicitation
  and Neighbor Advertisement messages and includes descriptions of
  address resolution and the Neighbor Unreachability Detection
  algorithm.




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  Neighbor Solicitation and Advertisement messages are also used for
  Duplicate Address Detection as specified by [ADDRCONF].  In
  particular, Duplicate Address Detection sends Neighbor Solicitation
  messages with an unspecified source address targeting its own
  "tentative" address.  Such messages trigger nodes already using the
  address to respond with a multicast Neighbor Advertisement indicating
  that the address is in use.

7.1.  Message Validation

7.1.1.  Validation of Neighbor Solicitations

  A node MUST silently discard any received Neighbor Solicitation
  messages that do not satisfy all of the following validity checks:

     - The IP Hop Limit field has a value of 255, i.e., the packet
       could not possibly have been forwarded by a router.

     - If the message includes an IP Authentication Header, the message
       authenticates correctly.

     - ICMP Checksum is valid.

     - ICMP Code is 0.

     - ICMP length (derived from the IP length) is 24 or more octets.

     - Target Address is not a multicast address.

     - All included options have a length that is greater than zero.

     - If the IP source address is the unspecified address, the IP
       destination address is a solicited-node multicast address.

     - If the IP source address is the unspecified address, there is no
       source link-layer address option in the message.

  The contents of the Reserved field, and of any unrecognized options,
  MUST be ignored.  Future, backward-compatible changes to the protocol
  may specify the contents of the Reserved field or add new options;
  backward-incompatible changes may use different Code values.

  The contents of any defined options that are not specified to be used
  with Neighbor Solicitation messages MUST be ignored and the packet
  processed as normal.  The only defined option that may appear is the
  Source Link-Layer Address option.





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  A Neighbor Solicitation that passes the validity checks is called a
  "valid solicitation".

7.1.2.  Validation of Neighbor Advertisements

  A node MUST silently discard any received Neighbor Advertisement
  messages that do not satisfy all of the following validity checks:

     - The IP Hop Limit field has a value of 255, i.e., the packet
       could not possibly have been forwarded by a router.

     - If the message includes an IP Authentication Header, the message
       authenticates correctly.

     - ICMP Checksum is valid.

     - ICMP Code is 0.

     - ICMP length (derived from the IP length) is 24 or more octets.

     - Target Address is not a multicast address.

     - If the IP Destination Address is a multicast address the
       Solicited flag is zero.

     - All included options have a length that is greater than zero.

  The contents of the Reserved field, and of any unrecognized options,
  MUST be ignored.  Future, backward-compatible changes to the protocol
  may specify the contents of the Reserved field or add new options;
  backward-incompatible changes may use different Code values.

  The contents of any defined options that are not specified to be used
  with Neighbor Advertisement messages MUST be ignored and the packet
  processed as normal.  The only defined option that may appear is the
  Target Link-Layer Address option.

  A Neighbor Advertisements that passes the validity checks is called a
  "valid advertisement".

7.2.  Address Resolution

  Address resolution is the process through which a node determines the
  link-layer address of a neighbor given only its IP address.  Address
  resolution is performed only on addresses that are determined to be
  on-link and for which the sender does not know the corresponding
  link-layer address.  Address resolution is never performed on
  multicast addresses.



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7.2.1.  Interface Initialization

  When a multicast-capable interface becomes enabled the node MUST join
  the all-nodes multicast address on that interface, as well as the
  solicited-node multicast address corresponding to each of the IP
  addresses assigned to the interface.

  The set of addresses assigned to an interface may change over time.
  New addresses might be added and old addresses might be removed
  [ADDRCONF].  In such cases the node MUST join and leave the
  solicited-node multicast address corresponding to the new and old
  addresses, respectively.  Note that multiple unicast addresses may
  map into the same solicited-node multicast address; a node MUST NOT
  leave the solicited-node multicast group until all assigned addresses
  corresponding to that multicast address have been removed.

7.2.2.  Sending Neighbor Solicitations

  When a node has a unicast packet to send to a neighbor, but does not
  know the neighbor's link-layer address, it performs address
  resolution.  For multicast-capable interfaces this entails creating a
  Neighbor Cache entry in the INCOMPLETE state and transmitting a
  Neighbor Solicitation message targeted at the neighbor.  The
  solicitation is sent to the solicited-node multicast address
  corresponding to the target address.

  If the source address of the packet prompting the solicitation is the
  same as one of the addresses assigned to the outgoing interface, that
  address SHOULD be placed in the IP Source Address of the outgoing
  solicitation.  Otherwise, any one of the addresses assigned to the
  interface should be used.  Using the prompting packet's source
  address when possible insures that the recipient of the Neighbor
  Solicitation installs in its Neighbor Cache the IP address that is
  highly likely to be used in subsequent return traffic belonging to
  the prompting packet's "connection".

  If the solicitation is being sent to a solicited-node multicast
  address, the sender MUST include its link-layer address (if it has
  one) as a Source Link-Layer Address option.  Otherwise, the sender
  SHOULD include its link-layer address (if it has one) as a Source
  Link-Layer Address option.  Including the source link-layer address
  in a multicast solicitation is required to give the target an address
  to which it can send the Neighbor Advertisement.  On unicast
  solicitations, an implementation MAY omit the Source Link-Layer
  Address option. The assumption here is that if the sender has a
  peer's link-layer address in its cache, there is a high probability
  that the peer will also have an entry in its cache for the sender.
  Consequently, it need not be sent.



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  While waiting for address resolution to complete, the sender MUST,
  for each neighbor, retain a small queue of packets waiting for
  address resolution to complete.  The queue MUST hold at least one
  packet, and MAY contain more.  However, the number of queued packets
  per neighbor SHOULD be limited to some small value.  When a queue
  overflows, the new arrival SHOULD replace the oldest entry.  Once
  address resolution completes, the node transmits any queued packets.

  While awaiting a response, the sender SHOULD retransmit Neighbor
  Solicitation messages approximately every RetransTimer milliseconds,
  even in the absence of additional traffic to the neighbor.
  Retransmissions MUST be rate-limited to at most one solicitation per
  neighbor every RetransTimer milliseconds.

  If no Neighbor Advertisement is received after MAX_MULTICAST_SOLICIT
  solicitations, address resolution has failed.  The sender MUST return
  ICMP destination unreachable indications with code 3 (Address
  Unreachable) for each packet queued awaiting address resolution.

7.2.3.  Receipt of Neighbor Solicitations

  A valid Neighbor Solicitation that does not meet any the following
  requirements MUST be silently discarded:

   - The Target Address is a "valid" unicast or anycast address
     assigned to the receiving interface [ADDRCONF],

   - The Target Address is a unicast address for which the node is
     offering proxy service, or

   - The Target Address is a "tentative" address on which Duplicate
     Address Detection is being performed [ADDRCONF].

  If the Target Address is tentative, the Neighbor Solicitation should
  be processed as described in [ADDRCONF].  Otherwise, the following
  description applies.  If the Source Address is not the unspecified
  address and, on link layers that have addresses, the solicitation
  includes a Source Link-Layer Address option, then the recipient
  SHOULD create or update the Neighbor Cache entry for the IP Source
  Address of the solicitation.  If an entry does not already exist, the
  node SHOULD create a new one and set its reachability state to STALE
  as specified in Section 7.3.3.  If an entry already exists, and the
  cached link-layer address differs from the one in the received Source
  Link-Layer option, the cached address should be replaced by the
  received address and the entry's reachability state MUST be set to
  STALE.





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  If a Neighbor Cache entry is created the IsRouter flag SHOULD be set
  to FALSE.  This will be the case even if the Neighbor Solicitation is
  sent by a router since the Neighbor Solicitation messages do not
  contain an indication of whether or not the sender is a router.  In
  the event that the sender is a router, subsequent Neighbor
  Advertisement or Router Advertisement messages will set the correct
  IsRouter value.  If a Neighbor Cache entry already exists its
  IsRouter flag MUST NOT be modified.

  If the Source Address is the unspecified address the node MUST NOT
  create or update the Neighbor Cache entry.

  After any updates to the Neighbor Cache, the node sends a Neighbor
  Advertisement response as described in the next section.

7.2.4.  Sending Solicited Neighbor Advertisements

  A node sends a Neighbor Advertisement in response to a valid Neighbor
  Solicitation targeting one of the node's assigned addresses.  The
  Target Address of the advertisement is copied from the Target Address
  of the solicitation.  If the solicitation's IP Destination Address is
  not a multicast address, the Target Link-Layer Address option MAY be
  omitted; the neighboring node's cached value must already be current
  in order for the solicitation to have been received.  If the
  solicitation's IP Destination Address is a multicast address, the
  Target Link-Layer option MUST be included in the advertisement.
  Furthermore, if the node is a router, it MUST set the Router flag to
  one; otherwise it MUST set the flag to zero.

  If the Target Address is either an anycast address or a unicast
  address for which the node is providing proxy service, or the Target
  Link-Layer Address option is not included, the Override flag SHOULD
  be set to zero.  Otherwise, the Override flag SHOULD be set to one.
  Proper setting of the Override flag ensures that nodes give
  preference to non-proxy advertisements, even when received after
  proxy advertisements, and also ensures that the first advertisement
  for an anycast address "wins".

  If the source of the solicitation is the unspecified address, the
  node MUST set the Solicited flag to zero and multicast the
  advertisement to the all-nodes address.  Otherwise, the node MUST set
  the Solicited flag to one and unicast the advertisement to the Source
  Address of the solicitation.

  If the Target Address is an anycast address the sender SHOULD delay
  sending a response for a random time between 0 and
  MAX_ANYCAST_DELAY_TIME seconds.




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  Because unicast Neighbor Solicitations are not required to include a
  Source Link-Layer Address, it is possible that a node sending a
  solicited Neighbor Advertisement does not have a corresponding link-
  layer address for its neighbor in its Neighbor Cache.  In such
  situations, a node will first have to use Neighbor Discovery to
  determine the link-layer address of its neighbor (i.e, send out a
  multicast Neighbor Solicitation).

7.2.5.  Receipt of Neighbor Advertisements

  When a valid Neighbor Advertisement is received (either solicited or
  unsolicited), the Neighbor Cache is searched for the target's entry.
  If no entry exists, the advertisement SHOULD be silently discarded.
  There is no need to create an entry if none exists, since the
  recipient has apparently not initiated any communication with the
  target.

  Once the appropriate Neighbor Cache entry has been located, the
  specific actions taken depend on the state of the Neighbor Cache
  entry, the flags in the advertisement and the actual link-layer
  address supplied.

  If the target's Neighbor Cache entry is in the INCOMPLETE state when
  the advertisement is received, one of two things happens.  If the
  link layer has addresses and no Target Link-Layer address option is
  included, the receiving node SHOULD silently discard the received
  advertisement.  Otherwise, the receiving node performs the following
  steps:

   - It records the link-layer address in the Neighbor Cache entry.

   - If the advertisement's Solicited flag is set, the state of the
     entry is set to REACHABLE, otherwise it is set to STALE.

   - It sets the IsRouter flag in the cache entry based on the Router
     flag in the received advertisement.

   - It sends any packets queued for the neighbor awaiting address
     resolution.

  Note that the Override flag is ignored if the entry is in the
  INCOMPLETE state.

  If the target's Neighbor Cache entry is in any state other than
  INCOMPLETE when the advertisement is received, processing becomes
  quite a bit more complex.  If the Override flag is clear and the
  supplied link-layer address differs from that in the cache, then one
  of two actions takes place: if the state of the entry is REACHABLE,



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  set it to STALE, but do not update the entry in any other way;
  otherwise, the received advertisement should be ignored and MUST NOT
  update the cache.  If the Override flag is set, both the Override
  flag is clear and the supplied link-layer address is the same as that
  in the cache, or no Target Link-layer address option was supplied,
  the received advertisement MUST update the Neighbor Cache entry as
  follows:

   - The link-layer address in the Target Link-Layer Address option
     MUST be inserted in the cache (if one is supplied and is different
     than the already recorded address).

   - If the Solicited flag is set, the state of the entry MUST be set
     to REACHABLE.  If the Solicited flag is zero and the link-layer
     address was updated with a different address the state MUST be set
     to STALE.  Otherwise, the entry's state remains unchanged.

     An advertisement's Solicited flag should only be set if the
     advertisement is a response to a Neighbor Solicitation.  Because
     Neighbor Unreachability Detection Solicitations are sent to the
     cached link-layer address, receipt of a solicited advertisement
     indicates that the forward path is working.  Receipt of an
     unsolicited advertisement, however, suggests that a neighbor has
     urgent information to announce (e.g., a changed link-layer
     address).  If the urgent information indicates a change from what
     a node is currently using, the node should verify the reachability
     of the (new) path when it sends the next packet.  There is no need
     to update the state for unsolicited advertisements that do not
     change the contents of the cache.

   - The IsRouter flag in the cache entry MUST be set based on the
     Router flag in the received advertisement.  In those cases where
     the IsRouter flag changes from TRUE to FALSE as a result of this
     update, the node MUST remove that router from the Default Router
     List and update the Destination Cache entries for all destinations
     using that neighbor as a router as specified in Section 7.3.3.
     This is needed to detect when a node that is used as a router
     stops forwarding packets due to being configured as a host.

  The above rules ensure that the cache is updated either when the
  Neighbor Advertisement takes precedence (i.e., the Override flag is
  set) or when the Neighbor Advertisement refers to the same link-layer
  address that is currently recorded in the cache.  If none of the
  above apply, the advertisement prompts future Neighbor Unreachability
  Detection (if it is not already in progress) by changing the state in
  the cache entry.





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7.2.6.  Sending Unsolicited Neighbor Advertisements

  In some cases a node may be able to determine that its link-layer
  address has changed (e.g., hot-swap of an interface card) and may
  wish to inform its neighbors of the new link-layer address quickly.
  In such cases a node MAY send up to MAX_NEIGHBOR_ADVERTISEMENT
  unsolicited Neighbor Advertisement messages to the all-nodes
  multicast address.  These advertisements MUST be separated by at
  least RetransTimer seconds.

  The Target Address field in the unsolicited advertisement is set to
  an IP address of the interface, and the Target Link-Layer Address
  option is filled with the new link-layer address.  The Solicited flag
  MUST be set to zero, in order to avoid confusing the Neighbor
  Unreachability Detection algorithm.  If the node is a router, it MUST
  set the Router flag to one; otherwise it MUST set it to zero.  The
  Override flag MAY be set to either zero or one.  In either case,
  neighboring nodes will immediately change the state of their Neighbor
  Cache entries for the Target Address to STALE, prompting them to
  verify the path for reachability.  If the Override flag is set to
  one, neighboring nodes will install the new link-layer address in
  their caches.  Otherwise, they will ignore the new link-layer
  address, choosing instead to probe the cached address.

  A node that has multiple IP addresses assigned to an interface MAY
  multicast a separate Neighbor Advertisement for each address.  In
  such a case the node SHOULD introduce a small delay between the
  sending of each advertisement to reduce the probability of the
  advertisements being lost due to congestion.

  A proxy MAY multicast Neighbor Advertisements when its link-layer
  address changes or when it is configured (by system management or
  other mechanisms) to proxy for an address.  If there are multiple
  nodes that are providing proxy services for the same set of addresses
  the proxies SHOULD provide a mechanism that prevents multiple proxies
  from multicasting advertisements for any one address, in order to
  reduce the risk of excessive multicast traffic.

  Also, a node belonging to an anycast address MAY multicast
  unsolicited Neighbor Advertisements for the anycast address when the
  node's link-layer address changes.

  Note that because unsolicited Neighbor Advertisements do not reliably
  update caches in all nodes (the advertisements might not be received
  by all nodes), they should only be viewed as a performance
  optimization to quickly update the caches in most neighbors.  The
  Neighbor Unreachability Detection algorithm ensures that all nodes
  obtain a reachable link-layer address, though the delay may be



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  slightly longer.

7.2.7.  Anycast Neighbor Advertisements

  From the perspective of Neighbor Discovery, anycast addresses are
  treated just like unicast addresses in most cases.  Because an
  anycast address is syntactically the same as a unicast address, nodes
  performing address resolution or Neighbor Unreachability Detection on
  an anycast address treat it as if it were a unicast address.  No
  special processing takes place.

  Nodes that have an anycast address assigned to an interface treat
  them exactly the same as if they were unicast addresses with two
  exceptions.  First, Neighbor Advertisements sent in response to a
  Neighbor Solicitation SHOULD be delayed by a random time between 0
  and MAX_ANYCAST_DELAY_TIME to reduce the probability of network
  congestion.  Second, the Override flag in Neighbor Advertisements
  SHOULD be set to 0, so that when multiple advertisements are
  received, the first received advertisement is used rather than the
  most recently received advertisement.

  As with unicast addresses, Neighbor Unreachability Detection ensures
  that a node quickly detects when the current binding for an anycast
  address becomes invalid.

7.2.8.  Proxy Neighbor Advertisements

  Under limited circumstances, a router MAY proxy for one or more other
  nodes, that is, through Neighbor Advertisements indicate that it is
  willing to accept packets not explicitly addressed to itself.  For
  example, a router might accept packets on behalf of a mobile node
  that has moved off-link.  The mechanisms used by proxy are identical
  to the mechanisms used with anycast addresses.

  A proxy MUST join the solicited-node multicast address(es) that
  correspond to the IP address(es) assigned to the node for which it is
  proxying.

  All solicited proxy Neighbor Advertisement messages MUST have the
  Override flag set to zero.  This ensures that if the node itself is
  present on the link its Neighbor Advertisement (with the Override
  flag set to one) will take precedence of any advertisement received
  from a proxy.  A proxy MAY send unsolicited advertisements with the
  Override flag set to one as specified in Section 7.2.6, but doing so
  may cause the proxy advertisement to override a valid entry created
  by the node itself.





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  Finally, when sending a proxy advertisement in response to a Neighbor
  Solicitation, the sender should delay its response by a random time
  between 0 and MAX_ANYCAST_DELAY_TIME seconds.

7.3.  Neighbor Unreachability Detection

  Communication to or through a neighbor may fail for numerous reasons
  at any time, including hardware failure, hot-swap of an interface
  card, etc.  If the destination has failed, no recovery is possible
  and communication fails.  On the other hand, if it is the path that
  has failed, recovery may be possible.  Thus, a node actively tracks
  the reachability "state" for the neighbors to which it is sending
  packets.

  Neighbor Unreachability Detection is used for all paths between hosts
  and neighboring nodes, including host-to-host, host-to-router, and
  router-to-host communication.  Neighbor Unreachability Detection may
  also be used between routers, but is not required if an equivalent
  mechanism is available, for example, as part of the routing
  protocols.

  When a path to a neighbor appears to be failing, the specific
  recovery procedure depends on how the neighbor is being used.  If the
  neighbor is the ultimate destination, for example, address resolution
  should be performed again.  If the neighbor is a router, however,
  attempting to switch to another router would be appropriate.  The
  specific recovery that takes place is covered under next-hop
  determination; Neighbor Unreachability Detection signals the need for
  next-hop determination by deleting a Neighbor Cache entry.

  Neighbor Unreachability Detection is performed only for neighbors to
  which unicast packets are sent; it is not used when sending to
  multicast addresses.

7.3.1.  Reachability Confirmation

  A neighbor is considered reachable if the node has recently received
  a confirmation that packets sent recently to the neighbor were
  received by its IP layer.  Positive confirmation can be gathered in
  two ways: hints from upper layer protocols that indicate a connection
  is making "forward progress", or receipt of a Neighbor Advertisement
  message that is a response to a Neighbor Solicitation message.

  A connection makes "forward progress" if the packets received from a
  remote peer can only be arriving if recent packets sent to that peer
  are actually reaching it.  In TCP, for example, receipt of a (new)
  acknowledgement indicates that previously sent data reached the peer.
  Likewise, the arrival of new (non-duplicate) data indicates that



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  earlier acknowledgements are being delivered to the remote peer.  If
  packets are reaching the peer, they must also be reaching the
  sender's next-hop neighbor; thus "forward progress" is a confirmation
  that the next-hop neighbor is reachable.  For off-link destinations,
  forward progress implies that the first-hop router is reachable.
  When available, this upper-layer information SHOULD be used.

  In some cases (e.g., UDP-based protocols and routers forwarding
  packets to hosts) such reachability information may not be readily
  available from upper-layer protocols.  When no hints are available
  and a node is sending packets to a neighbor, the node actively probes
  the neighbor using unicast Neighbor Solicitation messages to verify
  that the forward path is still working.

  The receipt of a solicited Neighbor Advertisement serves as
  reachability confirmation, since advertisements with the Solicited
  flag set to one are sent only in response to a Neighbor Solicitation.
  Receipt of other Neighbor Discovery messages such as Router
  Advertisements and Neighbor Advertisement with the Solicited flag set
  to zero MUST NOT be treated as a reachability confirmation.  Receipt
  of unsolicited messages only confirm the one-way path from the sender
  to the recipient node.  In contrast, Neighbor Unreachability
  Detection requires that a node keep track of the reachability of the
  forward path to a neighbor from the its perspective, not the
  neighbor's perspective.  Note that receipt of a solicited
  advertisement indicates that a path is working in both directions.
  The solicitation must have reached the neighbor, prompting it to
  generate an advertisement.  Likewise, receipt of an advertisement
  indicates that the path from the sender to the recipient is working.
  However, the latter fact is known only to the recipient; the
  advertisement's sender has no direct way of knowing that the
  advertisement it sent actually reached a neighbor.  From the
  perspective of Neighbor Unreachability Detection, only the
  reachability of the forward path is of interest.

7.3.2.  Neighbor Cache Entry States

  A Neighbor Cache entry can be in one of five states:

     INCOMPLETE  Address resolution is being performed on the entry.
                 Specifically, a Neighbor Solicitation has been sent to
                 the solicited-node multicast address of the target,
                 but the corresponding Neighbor Advertisement has not
                 yet been received.

     REACHABLE   Positive confirmation was received within the last
                 ReachableTime milliseconds that the forward path to
                 the neighbor was functioning properly.  While



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                 REACHABLE, no special action takes place as packets
                 are sent.

     STALE       More than ReachableTime milliseconds have elapsed
                 since the last positive confirmation was received that
                 the forward path was functioning properly.  While
                 stale, no action takes place until a packet is sent.

                 The STALE state is entered upon receiving an
                 unsolicited Neighbor Discovery message that updates
                 the cached link-layer address.  Receipt of such a
                 message does not confirm reachability, and entering
                 the STALE state insures reachability is verified
                 quickly if the entry is actually being used.  However,
                 reachability is not actually verified until the entry
                 is actually used.

     DELAY       More than ReachableTime milliseconds have elapsed
                 since the last positive confirmation was received that
                 the forward path was functioning properly, and a
                 packet was sent within the last DELAY_FIRST_PROBE_TIME
                 seconds.  If no reachability confirmation is received
                 within DELAY_FIRST_PROBE_TIME seconds of entering the
                 DELAY state, send a Neighbor Solicitation and change
                 the state to PROBE.

                 The DELAY state is an optimization that gives upper-
                 layer protocols additional time to provide
                 reachability confirmation in those cases where
                 ReachableTime milliseconds have passed since the last
                 confirmation due to lack of recent traffic.  Without
                 this optimization the opening of a TCP connection
                 after a traffic lull would initiate probes even though
                 the subsequent three-way handshake would provide a
                 reachability confirmation almost immediately.

     PROBE       A reachability confirmation is actively sought by
                 retransmitting Neighbor Solicitations every
                 RetransTimer milliseconds until a reachability
                 confirmation is received.

7.3.3.  Node Behavior

  Neighbor Unreachability Detection operates in parallel with the
  sending of packets to a neighbor.  While reasserting a neighbor's
  reachability, a node continues sending packets to that neighbor using
  the cached link-layer address.  If no traffic is sent to a neighbor,
  no probes are sent.



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  When a node needs to perform address resolution on a neighboring
  address, it creates an entry in the INCOMPLETE state and initiates
  address resolution as specified in Section 7.2.  If address
  resolution fails, the entry SHOULD be deleted, so that subsequent
  traffic to that neighbor invokes the next-hop determination procedure
  again.  Invoking next-hop determination at this point insures that
  alternate default routers are tried.

  When a reachability confirmation is received (either through upper-
  layer advice or a solicited Neighbor Advertisement) an entry's state
  changes to REACHABLE.  The one exception is that upper-layer advice
  has no effect on entries in the INCOMPLETE state (e.g., for which no
  link-layer address is cached).

  When ReachableTime milliseconds have passed since receipt of the last
  reachability confirmation for a neighbor, the Neighbor Cache entry's
  state changes from REACHABLE to STALE.

     Note: An implementation may actually defer changing the state from
     REACHABLE to STALE until a packet is sent to the neighbor, i.e.,
     there need not be an explicit timeout event associated with the
     expiration of ReachableTime.

  The first time a node sends a packet to a neighbor whose entry is
  STALE, the sender changes the state to DELAY and a sets a timer to
  expire in DELAY_FIRST_PROBE_TIME seconds.  If the entry is still in
  the DELAY state when the timer expires, the entry's state changes to
  PROBE.  If reachability confirmation is received, the entry's state
  changes to REACHABLE.

  Upon entering the PROBE state, a node sends a unicast Neighbor
  Solicitation message to the neighbor using the cached link-layer
  address.  While in the PROBE state, a node retransmits Neighbor
  Solicitation messages every RetransTimer milliseconds until
  reachability confirmation is obtained.  Probes are retransmitted even
  if no additional packets are sent to the neighbor.  If no response is
  received after waiting RetransTimer milliseconds after sending the
  MAX_UNICAST_SOLICIT solicitations, retransmissions cease and the
  entry SHOULD be deleted.  Subsequent traffic to that neighbor will
  recreate the entry and performs address resolution again.

  Note that all Neighbor Solicitations are rate-limited on a per-
  neighbor basis.  A node MUST NOT send Neighbor Solicitations to the
  same neighbor more frequently than once every RetransTimer
  milliseconds.






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  A Neighbor Cache entry enters the STALE state when created as a
  result of receiving packets other than solicited Neighbor
  Advertisements (i.e., Router Solicitations, Router Advertisements,
  Redirects, and Neighbor Solicitations).  These packets contain the
  link-layer address of either the sender or, in the case of Redirect,
  the redirection target.  However, receipt of these link-layer
  addresses does not confirm reachability of the forward-direction path
  to that node.  Placing a newly created Neighbor Cache entry for which
  the link-layer address is known in the STALE state provides assurance
  that path failures are detected quickly.  In addition, should a
  cached link-layer address be modified due to receiving one of the
  above messages the state SHOULD also be set to STALE to provide
  prompt verification that the path to the new link-layer address is
  working.

  To properly detect the case where a router switches from being a
  router to being a host (e.g., if its IP forwarding capability is
  turned off by system management), a node MUST compare the Router flag
  field in all received Neighbor Advertisement messages with the
  IsRouter flag recorded in the Neighbor Cache entry.  When a node
  detects that a neighbor has changed from being a router to being a
  host, the node MUST remove that router from the Default Router List
  and update the Destination Cache as described in Section 6.3.5.  Note
  that a router may not be listed in the Default Router List, even
  though a Destination Cache entry is using it (e.g., a host was
  redirected to it).  In such cases, all Destination Cache entries that
  reference the (former) router must perform next-hop determination
  again before using the entry.

  In some cases, link-specific information may indicate that a path to
  a neighbor has failed (e.g., the resetting of a virtual circuit).  In
  such cases, link-specific information may be used to purge Neighbor
  Cache entries before the Neighbor Unreachability Detection would do
  so.  However, link-specific information MUST NOT be used to confirm
  the reachability of a neighbor; such information does not provide
  end-to-end confirmation between neighboring IP layers.

8.  REDIRECT FUNCTION

  This section describes the functions related to the sending and
  processing of Redirect messages.

  Redirect messages are sent by routers to redirect a host to a better
  first-hop router for a specific destination or to inform hosts that a
  destination is in fact a neighbor (i.e., on-link).  The latter is
  accomplished by having the ICMP Target Address be equal to the ICMP
  Destination Address.




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  A router MUST be able to determine the link-local address for each of
  its neighboring routers in order to ensure that the target address in
  a Redirect message identifies the neighbor router by its link-local
  address.  For static routing this requirement implies that the next-
  hop router's address should be specified using the link-local address
  of the router.  For dynamic routing this requirement implies that all
  IPv6 routing protocols must somehow exchange the link-local addresses
  of neighboring routers.

8.1.  Validation of Redirect Messages

  A host MUST silently discard any received Redirect message that does
  not satisfy all of the following validity checks:

     - IP Source Address is a link-local address.  Routers must use
       their link-local address as the source for Router Advertisement
       and Redirect messages so that hosts can uniquely identify
       routers.

     - The IP Hop Limit field has a value of 255, i.e., the packet
       could not possibly have been forwarded by a router.

     - If the message includes an IP Authentication Header, the message
       authenticates correctly.

     - ICMP Checksum is valid.

     - ICMP Code is 0.

     - ICMP length (derived from the IP length) is 40 or more octets.

     - The IP source address of the Redirect is the same as the current
       first-hop router for the specified ICMP Destination Address.

     - The ICMP Destination Address field in the redirect message does
       not contain a multicast address.

     - The ICMP Target Address is either a link-local address (when
       redirected to a router) or the same as the ICMP Destination
       Address (when redirected to the on-link destination).

     - All included options have a length that is greater than zero.

  The contents of the Reserved field, and of any unrecognized options
  MUST be ignored.  Future, backward-compatible changes to the protocol
  may specify the contents of the Reserved field or add new options;
  backward-incompatible changes may use different Code values.




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  The contents of any defined options that are not specified to be used
  with Redirect messages MUST be ignored and the packet processed as
  normal.  The only defined options that may appear are the Target
  Link-Layer Address option and the Redirected Header option.

  A host MUST NOT consider a redirect invalid just because the Target
  Address of the redirect is not covered under one of the link's
  prefixes.  Part of the semantics of the Redirect message is that the
  Target Address is on-link.

  A redirect that passes the validity checks is called a "valid
  redirect".

8.2.  Router Specification

  A router SHOULD send a redirect message, subject to rate limiting,
  whenever it forwards a packet that is not explicitly addressed to
  itself (i.e. a packet that is not source routed through the router)
  in which:

     - the Source Address field of the packet identifies a neighbor,
       and

     - the router determines that a better first-hop node resides on
       the same link as the sending node for the Destination Address of
       the packet being forwarded, and

     - the Destination Address of the packet is not a multicast
       address, and

  The transmitted redirect packet contains, consistent with the message
  format given in Section 4.5:

     - In the Target Address field: the address to which subsequent
       packets for the destination SHOULD be sent.  If the target is a
       router, that router's link-local address MUST be used.  If the
       target is a host the target address field MUST be set to the
       same value as the Destination Address field.

     - In the Destination Address field: the destination address of the
       invoking IP packet.

     - In the options:

          o Target Link-Layer Address option: link-layer address of the
            target, if known.





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          o Redirected Header: as much of the forwarded packet as can
            fit without the redirect packet exceeding 1280 octets in
            size.

  A router MUST limit the rate at which Redirect messages are sent, in
  order to limit the bandwidth and processing costs incurred by the
  Redirect messages when the source does not correctly respond to the
  Redirects, or the source chooses to ignore unauthenticated Redirect
  messages.  More details on the rate-limiting of ICMP error messages
  can be found in [ICMPv6].

  A router MUST NOT update its routing tables upon receipt of a
  Redirect.

8.3.  Host Specification

  A host receiving a valid redirect SHOULD update its Destination Cache
  accordingly so that subsequent traffic goes to the specified target.
  If no Destination Cache entry exists for the destination, an
  implementation SHOULD create such an entry.

  If the redirect contains a Target Link-Layer Address option the host
  either creates or updates the Neighbor Cache entry for the target.
  In both cases the cached link-layer address is copied from the Target
  Link-Layer Address option.  If a Neighbor Cache entry is created for
  the target its reachability state MUST be set to STALE as specified
  in Section 7.3.3.  If a cache entry already existed and it is updated
  with a different link-layer address, its reachability state MUST also
  be set to STALE.  If the link-layer address is the same as that
  already in the cache, the cache entry's state remains unchanged.

  If the Target and Destination Addresses are the same, the host MUST
  treat the Target as on-link.  If the Target Address is not the same
  as the Destination Address, the host MUST set IsRouter to TRUE for
  the target.  If the Target and Destination Addresses are the same,
  however, one cannot reliably determine whether the Target Address is
  a router.  Consequently, newly created Neighbor Cache entries should
  set the IsRouter flag to FALSE, while existing cache entries should
  leave the flag unchanged.  If the Target is a router, subsequent
  Neighbor Advertisement or Router Advertisement messages will update
  IsRouter accordingly.

  Redirect messages apply to all flows that are being sent to a given
  destination.  That is, upon receipt of a Redirect for a Destination
  Address, all Destination Cache entries to that address should be
  updated to use the specified next-hop, regardless of the contents of
  the Flow Label field that appears in the Redirected Header option.




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  A host MAY have a configuration switch that can be set to make it
  ignore a Redirect message that does not have an IP Authentication
  header.

  A host MUST NOT send Redirect messages.

9.  EXTENSIBILITY - OPTION PROCESSING

  Options provide a mechanism for encoding variable length fields,
  fields that may appear multiple times in the same packet, or
  information that may not appear in all packets.  Options can also be
  used to add additional functionality to future versions of ND.

  In order to ensure that future extensions properly coexist with
  current implementations, all nodes MUST silently ignore any options
  they do not recognize in received ND packets and continue processing
  the packet.  All options specified in this document MUST be
  recognized.  A node MUST NOT ignore valid options just because the ND
  message contains unrecognized ones.

  The current set of options is defined in such a way that receivers
  can process multiple options in the same packet independently of each
  other.  In order to maintain these properties future options SHOULD
  follow the simple rule:

       The option MUST NOT depend on the presence or absence of any
       other options.  The semantics of an option should depend only on
       the information in the fixed part of the ND packet and on the
       information contained in the option itself.

  Adhering to the above rule has the following benefits:

    1) Receivers can process options independently of one another.  For
       example, an implementation can choose to process the Prefix
       Information option contained in a Router Advertisement message
       in a user-space process while the link-layer address option in
       the same message is processed by routines in the kernel.

    2) Should the number of options cause a packet to exceed a link's
       MTU, multiple packets can carry subsets of the options without
       any change in semantics.

    3) Senders MAY send a subset of options in different packets.  For
       instance, if a prefix's Valid and Preferred Lifetime are high
       enough, it might not be necessary to include the Prefix
       Information option in every Router Advertisement.  In addition,
       different routers might send different sets of options.  Thus, a
       receiver MUST NOT associate any action with the absence of an



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       option in a particular packet.  This protocol specifies that
       receivers should only act on the expiration of timers and on the
       information that is received in the packets.

  Options in Neighbor Discovery packets can appear in any order;
  receivers MUST be prepared to process them independently of their
  order.  There can also be multiple instances of the same option in a
  message (e.g., Prefix Information options).

  If the number of included options in a Router Advertisement causes
  the advertisement's size to exceed the link MTU, the router can send
  multiple separate advertisements each containing a subset of the
  options.

  The amount of data to include in the Redirected Header option MUST be
  limited so that the entire redirect packet does not exceed 1280
  octets.

  All options are a multiple of 8 octets of length, ensuring
  appropriate alignment without any "pad" options.  The fields in the
  options (as well as the fields in ND packets) are defined to align on
  their natural boundaries (e.g., a 16-bit field is aligned on a 16-bit
  boundary) with the exception of the 128-bit IP addresses/prefixes,
  which are aligned on a 64-bit boundary.  The link-layer address field
  contains an uninterpreted octet string; it is aligned on an 8-bit
  boundary.

  The size of an ND packet including the IP header is limited to the
  link MTU (which is at least 1280 octets).  When adding options to an
  ND packet a node MUST NOT exceed the link MTU.

  Future versions of this protocol may define new option types.
  Receivers MUST silently ignore any options they do not recognize and
  continue processing the message.

10.  PROTOCOL CONSTANTS

  Router constants:

           MAX_INITIAL_RTR_ADVERT_INTERVAL  16 seconds

           MAX_INITIAL_RTR_ADVERTISEMENTS    3 transmissions

           MAX_FINAL_RTR_ADVERTISEMENTS      3 transmissions

           MIN_DELAY_BETWEEN_RAS             3 seconds

           MAX_RA_DELAY_TIME                 .5 seconds



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  Host constants:

           MAX_RTR_SOLICITATION_DELAY        1 second

           RTR_SOLICITATION_INTERVAL         4 seconds

           MAX_RTR_SOLICITATIONS             3 transmissions

  Node constants:

           MAX_MULTICAST_SOLICIT             3 transmissions

           MAX_UNICAST_SOLICIT               3 transmissions

           MAX_ANYCAST_DELAY_TIME            1 second

           MAX_NEIGHBOR_ADVERTISEMENT        3 transmissions

           REACHABLE_TIME               30,000 milliseconds

           RETRANS_TIMER                 1,000 milliseconds

           DELAY_FIRST_PROBE_TIME            5 seconds

           MIN_RANDOM_FACTOR                 .5

           MAX_RANDOM_FACTOR                 1.5

  Additional protocol constants are defined with the message formats in
  Section 4.

  All protocol constants are subject to change in future revisions of
  the protocol.

  The constants in this specification may be overridden by specific
  documents that describe how IPv6 operates over different link layers.
  This rule allows Neighbor Discovery to operate over links with widely
  varying performance characteristics.

11.  SECURITY CONSIDERATIONS

  Neighbor Discovery is subject to attacks that cause IP packets to
  flow to unexpected places.  Such attacks can be used to cause denial
  of service but also allow nodes to intercept and optionally modify
  packets destined for other nodes.






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  The protocol reduces the exposure to such threats in the absence of
  authentication by ignoring ND packets received from off-link senders.
  The Hop Limit field of all received packets is verified to contain
  255, the maximum legal value.  Because routers decrement the Hop
  Limit on all packets they forward, received packets containing a Hop
  Limit of 255 must have originated from a neighbor.

  An example of denial of service attacks is that a node on the link
  that can send packets with an arbitrary IP source address can both
  advertise itself as a default router and also send "forged" Router
  Advertisement messages that immediately time out all other default
  routers as well as all on-link prefixes.  An intruder can achieve
  this by sending out multiple Router Advertisements, one for each
  legitimate router, with the source address set to the address of
  another router, the Router Lifetime field set to zero, and the
  Preferred and Valid lifetimes set to zero for all the prefixes.  Such
  an attack would cause all packets, for both on-link and off-link
  destinations, to go to the rogue router.  That router can then
  selectively examine, modify or drop all packets sent on the link. The
  Neighbor Unreachability Detection will not detect such a black hole
  as long as the rogue router politely answers the NUD probes with a
  Neighbor Advertisement with the R-bit set.

  Many link layers are also subject to different denial of service
  attacks such as continuously occupying the link in CSMA/CD networks
  (e.g., by sending packets closely back-to-back or asserting the
  collision signal on the link), or originating packets with somebody
  else's source MAC address to confuse, e.g., Ethernet switches.

  The trust model for redirects is the same as in IPv4.  A redirect is
  accepted only if received from the same router that is currently
  being used for that destination.  It is natural to trust the routers
  on the link.  If a host has been redirected to another node (i.e.,
  the destination is on-link) there is no way to prevent the target
  from issuing another redirect to some other destination.  However,
  this exposure is no worse than it was; the target host, once
  subverted, could always act as a hidden router to forward traffic
  elsewhere.

  The protocol contains no mechanism to determine which neighbors are
  authorized to send a particular type of message (e.g., Router
  Advertisements); any neighbor, presumably even in the presence of
  authentication, can send Router Advertisement messages thereby being
  able to cause denial of service.  Furthermore, any neighbor can send
  proxy Neighbor Advertisements as well as unsolicited Neighbor
  Advertisements as a potential denial of service attack.





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RFC 2461              Neighbor Discovery for IPv6          December 1998


  Neighbor Discovery protocol packet exchanges can be authenticated
  using the IP Authentication Header [IPv6-AUTH].  A node SHOULD
  include an Authentication Header when sending Neighbor Discovery
  packets if a security association for use with the IP Authentication
  Header exists for the destination address.  The security associations
  may have been created through manual configuration or through the
  operation of some key management protocol.

  Received Authentication Headers in Neighbor Discovery packets MUST be
  verified for correctness and packets with incorrect authentication
  MUST be ignored.

  It SHOULD be possible for the system administrator to configure a
  node to ignore any Neighbor Discovery messages that are not
  authenticated using either the Authentication Header or Encapsulating
  Security Payload.  The configuration technique for this MUST be
  documented.  Such a switch SHOULD default to allowing unauthenticated
  messages.

  Confidentiality issues are addressed by the IP Security Architecture
  and the IP Encapsulating Security Payload documents [IPv6-SA, IPv6-
  ESP].

12.  RENUMBERING CONSIDERATIONS

  The Neighbor Discovery protocol together with IPv6 Address
  Autoconfiguration [ADDRCONF] provides mechanisms to aid in
  renumbering - new prefixes and addresses can be introduced and old
  ones can be deprecated and removed.

  The robustness of these mechanisms is based on all the nodes on the
  link receiving the Router Advertisement messages in a timely manner.
  However, a host might be turned off or be unreachable for an extended
  period of time (i.e., a machine is powered down for months after a
  project terminates).  It is possible to preserve robust renumbering
  in such cases but it does place some constraints on how long prefixes
  must be advertised.

  Consider the following example in which a prefix is initially
  advertised with a lifetime of 2 months, but on August 1st it is
  determined that the prefix needs to be deprecated and removed due to
  renumbering by September 1st.  This can be done by reducing the
  advertised lifetime to 1 week starting on August 1st and as the
  cutoff gets closer the lifetimes can be made shorter until by
  September 1st the prefix is advertised with a zero lifetime.  The
  point is that, if one or more nodes were unplugged from the link
  prior to September 1st they might still think that the prefix is
  valid since the last lifetime they received was 2 months.  Thus if a



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  node was unplugged on July 31st it thinks the prefix is valid until
  September 30th.  If that node is plugged back in prior to September
  30th it may continue to use the old prefix.  The only way to force a
  node to stop using a prefix that was previously advertised with a
  long Lifetime is to have that node receive an advertisement for that
  prefix that changes the lifetime downward.  The solution in this
  example is simple: continue advertising the prefix with a lifetime of
  0 from September 1st until October 1st.

  In general, in order to be robust against nodes that might be
  unplugged from the link it is important to track the furthest into
  the future a particular prefix can be viewed valid by any node on the
  link.  The prefix must then be advertised with a 0 Lifetime until
  that point in future. This "furthest into the future" time is simply
  the maximum, over all Router Advertisements, of the time the
  advertisement was sent plus the prefix's Lifetime contained in the
  advertisement.

  The above has an important implication on using infinite lifetimes.
  If a prefix is advertised with an infinite lifetime, and that prefix
  later needs to be renumbered, it is undesirable to continue
  advertising that prefix with a zero lifetime forever.  Thus either
  infinite lifetimes should be avoided or there must be a limit on how
  long time a node can be unplugged from the link before it is plugged
  back in again.  However, it is unclear how the network administrator
  can enforce a limit on how long time hosts such as laptops can be
  unplugged from the link.

  Network administrators should give serious consideration to using
  relatively short lifetimes (i.e., no more than a few weeks).  While
  it might appear that using long lifetimes would help insure
  robustness, in reality a host will be unable to communicate in the
  absence of properly functioning routers.  Such routers will be
  sending Router Advertisements that contain appropriate (and current)
  prefixes.  A host connected to a network that has no functioning
  routers is likely to have more serious problems than just a lack of a
  valid prefix and address.

  The above discussion does not distinguish between the preferred and
  valid lifetimes.  For all practical purposes it is probably
  sufficient to track the valid lifetime since the preferred lifetime
  will not exceed the valid lifetime.









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REFERENCES

  [ADDRCONF]   Thomson, S. and T. Narten, "IPv6 Address
               Autoconfiguration", RFC 2462, December 1998.

  [ADDR-ARCH]  Hinden, R. and S. Deering, "IP Version 6 Addressing
               Architecture", RFC 2373, July 1998.

  [ANYCST]     Partridge, C., Mendez, T. and W. Milliken, "Host
               Anycasting Service", RFC 1546, November 1993.

  [ARP]        Plummer, D., "An Ethernet Address Resolution Protocol",
               STD 37, RFC 826, November 1982.

  [HR-CL]      Braden, R., Editor, "Requirements for Internet Hosts --
               Communication Layers", STD 3, RFC 1122, October 1989.

  [ICMPv4]     Postel, J., "Internet Control Message Protocol", STD 5,
               RFC 792, September 1981.

  [ICMPv6]     Conta, A. and S. Deering, "Internet Control Message
               Protocol (ICMPv6) for the Internet Protocol Version 6
               (IPv6) Specification", RFC 2463, December 1998.

  [IPv6]       Deering, S. and R. Hinden, "Internet Protocol, Version 6
               (IPv6) Specification", RFC 2460, December 1998.

  [IPv6-ETHER] Crawford, M., "Transmission of IPv6 Packets over
               Ethernet Networks", RFC 2464, December 1998.

  [IPv6-SA]    Kent, S. and R. Atkinson, "Security Architecture for the
               Internet Protocol", RFC 2401, November 1998.

  [IPv6-AUTH]  Kent, S. and R. Atkinson, "IP Authentication Header",
               RFC 2402, November 1998.

  [IPv6-ESP]   Kent, S. and R. Atkinson, "IP Encapsulating Security
               Payload (ESP)", RFC 2406, November 1998.

  [KEYWORDS]   Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate
               Requirement Levels", BCP 14, RFC 2119, March 1997.

  [RDISC]      Deering, S., "ICMP Router Discovery Messages", RFC 1256,
               September 1991.

  [SH-MEDIA]   Braden, R., Postel, J. and Y. Rekhter, "Internet
               Architecture Extensions for Shared Media", RFC 1620, May
               1994.



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RFC 2461              Neighbor Discovery for IPv6          December 1998


  [ASSIGNED]   Reynolds, J. and J. Postel, "ASSIGNED NUMBERS", STD 2,
               RFC 1700, October 1994. See also:
               http://www.iana.org/numbers.html

  [SYNC]       S. Floyd, V. Jacobson, "The Synchronization of Periodic
               Routing Messages", IEEE/ACM Transactions on Networking,
               April 1994.  ftp://ftp.ee.lbl.gov/papers/sync_94.ps.Z

Authors' Addresses

  Thomas Narten
  IBM Corporation
  P.O. Box 12195
  Research Triangle Park, NC 27709-2195
  USA

  Phone: +1 919 254 7798
  EMail: [email protected]


  Erik Nordmark
  Sun Microsystems, Inc.
  901 San Antonio Road
  Palo Alto, CA 94303
  USA

  Phone: +1 650 786 5166
  Fax:   +1 650 786 5896
  EMail: [email protected]


  William Allen Simpson
  Daydreamer
  Computer Systems Consulting Services
  1384 Fontaine
  Madison Heights, Michigan  48071
  USA

  EMail: [email protected]
         [email protected]











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RFC 2461              Neighbor Discovery for IPv6          December 1998


APPENDIX A: MULTIHOMED HOSTS

  There are a number of complicating issues that arise when Neighbor
  Discovery is used by hosts that have multiple interfaces.  This
  section does not attempt to define the proper operation of multihomed
  hosts with regard to Neighbor Discovery.  Rather, it identifies
  issues that require further study.  Implementors are encouraged to
  experiment with various approaches to making Neighbor Discovery work
  on multihomed hosts and to report their experiences.

  If a multihomed host receives Router Advertisements on all of its
  interfaces, it will (probably) have learned on-link prefixes for the
  addresses residing on each link.  When a packet must be sent through
  a router, however, selecting the "wrong" router can result in a
  suboptimal or non-functioning path.  There are number of issues to
  consider:

    1) In order for a router to send a redirect, it must determine that
       the packet it is forwarding originates from a neighbor.  The
       standard test for this case is to compare the source address of
       the packet to the list of on-link prefixes associated with the
       interface on which the packet was received.  If the originating
       host is multihomed, however, the source address it uses may
       belong to an interface other than the interface from which it
       was sent.  In such cases, a router will not send redirects, and
       suboptimal routing is likely.  In order to be redirected, the
       sending host must always send packets out the interface
       corresponding to the outgoing packet's source address.  Note
       that this issue never arises with non-multihomed hosts; they
       only have one interface.

    2) If the selected first-hop router does not have a route at all
       for the destination, it will be unable to deliver the packet.
       However, the destination may be reachable through a router on
       one of the other interfaces.  Neighbor Discovery does not
       address this scenario; it does not arise in the non-multihomed
       case.

    3) Even if the first-hop router does have a route for a
       destination, there may be a better route via another interface.
       No mechanism exists for the multihomed host to detect this
       situation.

  If a multihomed host fails to receive Router Advertisements on one or
  more of its interfaces, it will not know (in the absence of
  configured information) which destinations are on-link on the
  affected interface(s).  This leads to a number of problems:




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    1) If no Router Advertisement is received on any interfaces, a
       multihomed host will have no way of knowing which interface to
       send packets out on, even for on-link destinations.  Under
       similar conditions in the non-multihomed host case, a node
       treats all destinations as residing on-link, and communication
       proceeds.  In the multihomed case, however, additional
       information is needed to select the proper outgoing interface.
       Alternatively, a node could attempt to perform address
       resolution on all interfaces, a step involving significant
       complexity that is not present in the non-multihomed host case.

    2) If Router Advertisements are received on some, but not all
       interfaces, a multihomed host could choose to only send packets
       out on the interfaces on which it has received Router
       Advertisements.  A key assumption made here, however, is that
       routers on those other interfaces will be able to route packets
       to the ultimate destination, even when those destinations reside
       on the subnet to which the sender connects, but has no on-link
       prefix information.  Should the assumption be FALSE,
       communication would fail.  Even if the assumption holds, packets
       will traverse a sub-optimal path.






























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APPENDIX B: FUTURE EXTENSIONS

  Possible extensions for future study are:

   o Using dynamic timers to be able to adapt to links with widely
     varying delay.  Measuring round trip times, however, requires
     acknowledgments and sequence numbers in order to match received
     Neighbor Advertisements with the actual Neighbor Solicitation that
     triggered the advertisement.  Implementors wishing to experiment
     with such a facility could do so in a backwards-compatible way by
     defining a new option carrying the necessary information.  Nodes
     not understanding the option would simply ignore it.

   o Adding capabilities to facilitate the operation over links that
     currently require hosts to register with an address resolution
     server.  This could for instance enable routers to ask hosts to
     send them periodic unsolicited advertisements.  Once again this
     can be added using a new option sent in the Router Advertisements.

   o Adding additional procedures for links where asymmetric and non-
     transitive reachability is part of normal operations.  Such
     procedures might allow hosts and routers to find usable paths on,
     e.g., radio links.




























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APPENDIX C: STATE MACHINE FOR THE REACHABILITY STATE

  This appendix contains a summary of the rules specified in Sections
  7.2 and 7.3.  This document does not mandate that implementations
  adhere to this model as long as their external behavior is consistent
  with that described in this document.

  When performing address resolution and Neighbor Unreachability
  Detection the following state transitions apply using the conceptual
  model:

State           Event                   Action                New state

-               Packet to send.         Create entry.         INCOMPLETE
                                       Send multicast NS.
                                       Start retransmit timer

INCOMPLETE      Retransmit timeout,     Retransmit NS         INCOMPLETE
               less than N             Start retransmit timer
               retransmissions.

INCOMPLETE      Retransmit timeout,     Discard entry         -
               N or more               Send ICMP error
               retransmissions.

INCOMPLETE      NA, Solicited=0,        Record link-layer     STALE
               Override=any            address.  Send queued
                                       packets.

INCOMPLETE      NA, Solicited=1,        Record link-layer     REACHABLE
               Override=any            address.  Send queued
                                       packets.

!INCOMPLETE     NA, Solicited=1,        -                     REACHABLE
               Override=0
               Same link-layer
               address as cached.

REACHABLE       NA, Solicited=1,        -                     STALE
               Override=0
               Different link-layer
               address than cached.

STALE or PROBE  NA, Solicited=1,        -                     unchanged
               Override=0
               Different link-layer
               address than cached.




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!INCOMPLETE     NA, Solicited=1,        Record link-layer     REACHABLE
               Override=1              address (if
                                       different).

!INCOMPLETE     NA, Solicited=0,        -                     unchanged
               Override=0

!INCOMPLETE     NA, Solicited=0,        -                     unchanged
               Override=1
               Same link-layer
               address as cached.

!INCOMPLETE     NA, Solicited=0,        Record link-layer     STALE
               Override=1              address.
               Different link-layer
               address than cached.

!INCOMPLETE     upper-layer reachability  -                   REACHABLE
               confirmation

REACHABLE       timeout, more than      -                     STALE
               N seconds since
               reachability confirm.

STALE           Sending packet          Start delay timer     DELAY

DELAY           Delay timeout           Send unicast NS probe PROBE
                                       Start retransmit timer

PROBE           Retransmit timeout,     Retransmit NS         PROBE
               less than N
               retransmissions.

PROBE           Retransmit timeout,     Discard entry         -
               N or more
               retransmissions.















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RFC 2461              Neighbor Discovery for IPv6          December 1998


  The state transitions for receiving unsolicited information other
  than Neighbor Advertisement messages apply to either the source of
  the packet (for Neighbor Solicitation, Router Solicitation, and
  Router Advertisement messages) or the target address (for Redirect
  messages) as follows:

State           Event                   Action                New state

-               NS, RS, RA, Redirect    Create entry.         STALE

INCOMPLETE      NS, RS, RA, Redirect    Record link-layer     STALE
                                       address.  Send queued
                                       packets.

!INCOMPLETE     NS, RS, RA, Redirect    Update link-layer     STALE
               Different link-layer    address
               address than cached.

!INCOMPLETE     NS, RS, RA, Redirect    -                     unchanged
               Same link-layer
               address as cached.






























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RFC 2461              Neighbor Discovery for IPv6          December 1998


APPENDIX D: SUMMARY OF ISROUTER RULES

  This appendix presents a summary of the rules for maintaining the
  IsRouter flag as specified in this document.

  The background for these rules is that the ND messages contain,
  either implicitly or explicitly, information that indicates whether
  or not the sender (or Target Address) is a host or a router.  The
  following assumptions are used:

   - The sender of a Router Solicitation is implicitly assumed to be a
     host since there is no need for routers to send such messages.

   - The sender of a Router Advertisement is implicitly assumed to be a
     router.

   - Neighbor Solicitation messages do not contain either an implicit
     or explicit indication about the sender.  Both hosts and routers
     send such messages.

     - Neighbor Advertisement messages contain an explicit "IsRouter
     flag", the R-bit.

   - The target of the redirect, when the target differs from the
     destination address in the packet being redirected, is implicitly
     assumed to be a router.  This is a natural assumption since that
     node is expected to be able to forward the packets towards the
     destination.

   - The target of the redirect, when the target is the same as the
     destination, does not carry any host vs. router information.  All
     that is known is that the destination (i.e. target) is on-link but
     it could be either a host or a router.

  The rules for setting the IsRouter flag are based on the information
  content above.  If an ND message contains explicit or implicit
  information the receipt of the message will cause the IsRouter flag
  to be updated.  But when there is no host vs. router information in
  the ND message the receipt of the message MUST NOT cause a change to
  the IsRouter state.  When the receipt of such a message causes a
  Neighbor Cache entry to be created this document specifies that the
  IsRouter flag be set to FALSE.  There is greater potential for
  mischief when a node incorrectly thinks a host is a router, than the
  other way around.  In these cases a subsequent Neighbor Advertisement
  or Router Advertisement message will set the correct IsRouter value.






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RFC 2461              Neighbor Discovery for IPv6          December 1998


APPENDIX E: IMPLEMENTATION ISSUES

Appendix E.1: Reachability confirmations

  Neighbor Unreachability Detection requires explicit confirmation that
  a forward-path is functioning properly.  To avoid the need for
  Neighbor Solicitation probe messages, upper layer protocols should
  provide such an indication when the cost of doing so is small.
  Reliable connection-oriented protocols such as TCP are generally
  aware when the forward-path is working.  When TCP sends (or receives)
  data, for instance, it updates its window sequence numbers, sets and
  cancels retransmit timers, etc.  Specific scenarios that usually
  indicate a properly functioning forward-path include:

   - Receipt of an acknowledgement that covers a sequence number (e.g.,
     data) not previously acknowledged indicates that the forward path
     was working at the time the data was sent.

   - Completion of the initial three-way handshake is a special case of
     the previous rule; although no data is sent during the handshake,
     the SYN flags are counted as data from the sequence number
     perspective.  This applies to both the SYN+ACK for the active open
     the ACK of that packet on the passively opening peer.

   - Receipt of new data (i.e., data not previously received) indicates
     that the forward-path was working at the time an acknowledgement
     was sent that advanced the peer's send window that allowed the new
     data to be sent.

  To minimize the cost of communicating reachability information
  between the TCP and IP layers, an implementation may wish to rate-
  limit the reachability confirmations its sends IP.  One possibility
  is to process reachability only every few packets.  For example, one
  might update reachability information once per round trip time, if an
  implementation only has one round trip timer per connection.  For
  those implementations that cache Destination Cache entries within
  control blocks, it may be possible to update the Neighbor Cache entry
  directly (i.e., without an expensive lookup) once the TCP packet has
  been demultiplexed to its corresponding control block.  For other
  implementation it may be possible to piggyback the reachability
  confirmation on the next packet submitted to IP assuming that the
  implementation guards against the piggybacked confirmation becoming
  stale when no packets are sent to IP for an extended period of time.

  TCP must also guard against thinking "stale" information indicates
  current reachability.  For example, new data received 30 minutes
  after a window has opened up does not constitute a confirmation that
  the path is currently working.  In merely indicates that 30 minutes



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  ago the window update reached the peer i.e. the path was working at
  that point in time.  An implementation must also take into account
  TCP zero-window probes that are sent even if the path is broken and
  the window update did not reach the peer.

  For UDP based applications (RPC, DNS) it is relatively simple to make
  the client send reachability confirmations when the response packet
  is received.  It is more difficult and in some cases impossible for
  the server to generate such confirmations since there is no flow
  control, i.e., the server can not determine whether a received
  request indicates that a previous response reached the client.

  Note that an implementation can not use negative upper-layer advise
  as a replacement for the Neighbor Unreachability Detection algorithm.
  Negative advise (e.g. from TCP when there are excessive
  retransmissions) could serve as a hint that the forward path from the
  sender of the data might not be working.  But it would fail to detect
  when the path from the receiver of the data is not functioning
  causing, none of the acknowledgement packets to reach the sender.
































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APPENDIX F: CHANGES SINCE RFC 1970

   o Removed all references to the IPv6 priority field.

   o Replaced definition of solicited node multicast address with a
     reference to the [ADDR-ARCH] specification.  That specification
     says that "the solicited-node multicast address is formed by
     taking the low-order 24 bits of the address (unicast or anycast)
     and appending those bits to the prefix FF02:0:0:0:0:1:FF00::/104".

   o Updated the references section to list (new) RFC numbers.

   o Updated the text in section 7.2.5 and the tables in appendix C to
     have the receipt of an NS message update the state of an existing
     neighbor cache entry only if the link-layer address is different
     than the recorded link-layer address.

   o Added an explicit check in section 7.1.1 so that received NS
     messages from an unsolicited address must be sent the solicited-
     node multicast address; if sent to unicast destination, silently
     discard.

   o Added a requirement in section 6.2.1 that Lifetimes be
     configurable in either of two ways: as a fixed value that doesn't
     change over time, or one that decrements in real time.

   o Added text in section 6.2.7 to relax the consistency checks on
     prefix lifetimes when the lifetimes are configured to decrement in
     real time.  This is needed to avoid false alarms due to link
     propagation delay and lack of synchronized clocks.

   o Added text to section 6.3.4 to point out that [ADDRCONF] might
     ignore short lifetimes but that Neighbor Discovery does not ignore
     short prefix lifetimes.

   o Clarified the rules for RS and NS packets with an unspecified
     source address. Such packets MUST NOT include source link-layer
     address option; verified by receivers.

   o Clarified in section 7.2.3 that addresses for which the node
     proxies are acceptable in NS messages.  Previously the text only
     mentioned unicast and anycast addresses assigned to the interface
     (i.e., wasn't clear that proxy addresses were allowed).

   o Tightened up ambiguities an inconsistencies regarding when to set
     the IsRouter flag in Neighbor Cache entries.  Added an appendix to
     summarize these rules.




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   o Added a section on renumbering considerations to clarify how long
     prefixes have to be advertised when the lifetime(s) are reduced.

   o Added additional text to the rules in section 7 for the NS/NA
     packets used for NUD probes so that the Link-Layer Address options
     can be omitted from these packets in certain cases without causing
     an infinite NS "recursion". Specifically, added text that permits
     the Link-Layer address to be omitted in unicast solicitations
     (i.e., MAY language).

   o Changed the default AdvValidLifetime from infinity to 30 days.

   o Changed the constant "576" to "1280" in places where its context
     was that of the minimum sized IP packet that all links must be
     able to carry.




































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RFC 2461              Neighbor Discovery for IPv6          December 1998


Full Copyright Statement

  Copyright (C) The Internet Society (1998).  All Rights Reserved.

  This document and translations of it may be copied and furnished to
  others, and derivative works that comment on or otherwise explain it
  or assist in its implementation may be prepared, copied, published
  and distributed, in whole or in part, without restriction of any
  kind, provided that the above copyright notice and this paragraph are
  included on all such copies and derivative works.  However, this
  document itself may not be modified in any way, such as by removing
  the copyright notice or references to the Internet Society or other
  Internet organizations, except as needed for the purpose of
  developing Internet standards in which case the procedures for
  copyrights defined in the Internet Standards process must be
  followed, or as required to translate it into languages other than
  English.

  The limited permissions granted above are perpetual and will not be
  revoked by the Internet Society or its successors or assigns.

  This document and the information contained herein is provided on an
  "AS IS" basis and THE INTERNET SOCIETY AND THE INTERNET ENGINEERING
  TASK FORCE DISCLAIMS ALL WARRANTIES, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING
  BUT NOT LIMITED TO ANY WARRANTY THAT THE USE OF THE INFORMATION
  HEREIN WILL NOT INFRINGE ANY RIGHTS OR ANY IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF
  MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.
























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