Network Working Group                                        S. Cheshire
Request for Comments: 5227                                    Apple Inc.
Updates: 826                                                   July 2008
Category: Standards Track


                   IPv4 Address Conflict Detection

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.

Abstract

  When two hosts on the same link attempt to use the same IPv4 address
  at the same time (except in rare special cases where this has been
  arranged by prior coordination), problems ensue for one or both
  hosts.  This document describes (i) a simple precaution that a host
  can take in advance to help prevent this misconfiguration from
  happening, and (ii) if this misconfiguration does occur, a simple
  mechanism by which a host can passively detect, after the fact, that
  it has happened, so that the host or administrator may respond to
  rectify the problem.
























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Table of Contents

  1. Introduction ....................................................2
     1.1. Conventions and Terminology Used in This Document ..........4
     1.2. Relationship to RFC 826 ....................................5
          1.2.1. Broadcast ARP Replies ...............................7
     1.3. Applicability ..............................................7
  2. Address Probing, Announcing, Conflict Detection, and Defense ....9
     2.1. Probing an Address ........................................10
          2.1.1. Probe Details ......................................10
     2.2. Shorter Timeouts on Appropriate Network Technologies ......11
     2.3. Announcing an Address .....................................12
     2.4. Ongoing Address Conflict Detection and Address Defense ....12
     2.5. Continuing Operation ......................................14
     2.6. Broadcast ARP Replies .....................................14
  3. Why Are ARP Announcements Performed Using ARP Request
     Packets and Not ARP Reply Packets? .............................15
  4. Historical Note ................................................17
  5. Security Considerations ........................................17
  6. Acknowledgments ................................................18
  7. References .....................................................18
     7.1. Normative References ......................................18
     7.2. Informative References ....................................19

1.  Introduction

  Historically, accidentally configuring two Internet hosts with the
  same IP address has often been an annoying and hard-to-diagnose
  problem.

  This is unfortunate, because the existing Address Resolution Protocol
  (ARP) provides an easy way for a host to detect this kind of
  misconfiguration and report it to the user.  The DHCP specification
  [RFC2131] briefly mentions the role of ARP in detecting
  misconfiguration, as illustrated in the following three excerpts from
  RFC 2131:

  o the client SHOULD probe the newly received address, e.g., with ARP

  o The client SHOULD perform a final check on the parameters
    (e.g., ARP for allocated network address)

  o If the client detects that the address is already in use
    (e.g., through the use of ARP), the client MUST send a DHCPDECLINE
    message to the server






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  Unfortunately, the DHCP specification does not give any guidance
  to implementers concerning the number of ARP packets to send, the
  interval between packets, the total time to wait before concluding
  that an address may safely be used, or indeed even which kinds
  of packets a host should be listening for, in order to make this
  determination.  It leaves unspecified the action a host should
  take if, after concluding that an address may safely be used, it
  subsequently discovers that it was wrong.  It also fails to specify
  what precautions a DHCP client should take to guard against
  pathological failure cases, such as a DHCP server that repeatedly
  OFFERs the same address, even though it has been DECLINEd multiple
  times.

  The authors of the DHCP specification may have been justified in
  thinking at the time that the answers to these questions seemed too
  simple, obvious, and straightforward to be worth mentioning, but
  unfortunately this left some of the burden of protocol design to each
  individual implementer.  This document seeks to remedy this omission
  by clearly specifying the required actions for:

  1. Determining whether use of an address is likely to lead to an
     addressing conflict.  This includes (a) the case where the address
     is already actively in use by another host on the same link, and
     (b) the case where two hosts are inadvertently about to begin
     using the same address, and both are simultaneously in the process
     of probing to determine whether the address may safely be used
     (Section 2.1.).

  2. Subsequent passive detection that another host on the network is
     inadvertently using the same address.  Even if all hosts observe
     precautions to avoid using an address that is already in use,
     conflicts can still occur if two hosts are out of communication
     at the time of initial interface configuration.  This could occur
     with wireless network interfaces if the hosts are temporarily out
     of range, or with Ethernet interfaces if the link between two
     Ethernet hubs is not functioning at the time of address
     configuration.  A well-designed host will handle not only
     conflicts detected during interface configuration, but also
     conflicts detected later, for the entire duration of the time
     that the host is using the address (Section 2.4.).

  3. Rate-limiting of address acquisition attempts in the case of
     an excessive number of repeated conflicts (Section 2.1.).

  The utility of IPv4 Address Conflict Detection (ACD) is not limited
  to DHCP clients.  No matter how an address was configured, whether
  via manual entry by a human user, via information received from a
  DHCP server, or via any other source of configuration information,



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  detecting conflicts is useful.  Upon detecting a conflict, the
  configuring agent should be notified of the error.  In the case where
  the configuring agent is a human user, that notification may take the
  form of an error message on a screen, a Simple Network Management
  Protocol (SNMP) notification, or an error message sent via text
  message to a mobile phone.  In the case of a DHCP server, that
  notification takes the form of a DHCP DECLINE message sent to the
  server.  In the case of configuration by some other kind of software,
  that notification takes the form of an error indication to the
  software in question, to inform it that the address it selected is
  in conflict with some other host on the network.  The configuring
  software may choose to cease network operation, or it may
  automatically select a new address so that the host may re-establish
  IP connectivity as soon as possible.

  Allocation of IPv4 Link-Local Addresses [RFC3927] can be thought of
  as a special case of this mechanism, where the configuring agent is
  a pseudo-random number generator, and the action it takes upon being
  notified of a conflict is to pick a different random number and try
  again.  In fact, this is exactly how IPv4 Link-Local Addressing was
  implemented in Mac OS 9 back in 1998.  If the DHCP client failed to
  get a response from any DHCP server, it would simply make up a fake
  response containing a random 169.254.x.x address.  If the ARP module
  reported a conflict for that address, then the DHCP client would try
  again, making up a new random 169.254.x.x address as many times as
  was necessary until it succeeded.  Implementing ACD as a standard
  feature of the networking stack has the side effect that it means
  that half the work for IPv4 Link-Local Addressing is already done.

1.1.  Conventions and Terminology Used in This Document

  The key words "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHALL", "SHALL NOT",
  "SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED", "MAY", and "OPTIONAL" in this
  document are to be interpreted as described in "Key words for use in
  RFCs to Indicate Requirement Levels" [RFC2119].

  Wherever this document uses the term 'sender IP address' or 'target
  IP address' in the context of an ARP packet, it is referring to the
  fields of the ARP packet identified in the ARP specification [RFC826]
  as 'ar$spa' (Sender Protocol Address) and 'ar$tpa' (Target Protocol
  Address), respectively.  For the usage of ARP described in this
  document, each of these fields always contains an IPv4 address.

  In this document, the term 'ARP Probe' is used to refer to an ARP
  Request packet, broadcast on the local link, with an all-zero 'sender
  IP address'.  The 'sender hardware address' MUST contain the hardware
  address of the interface sending the packet.  The 'sender IP address'
  field MUST be set to all zeroes, to avoid polluting ARP caches in



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  other hosts on the same link in the case where the address turns out
  to be already in use by another host.  The 'target hardware address'
  field is ignored and SHOULD be set to all zeroes.  The 'target IP
  address' field MUST be set to the address being probed.  An ARP Probe
  conveys both a question ("Is anyone using this address?") and an
  implied statement ("This is the address I hope to use.").

  In this document, the term 'ARP Announcement' is used to refer to an
  ARP Request packet, broadcast on the local link, identical to the ARP
  Probe described above, except that both the sender and target IP
  address fields contain the IP address being announced.  It conveys a
  stronger statement than an ARP Probe, namely, "This is the address I
  am now using."

  The following timing constants used in this protocol are referenced
  in Section 2, which describes the operation of the protocol in
  detail.  (Note that the values listed here are fixed constants; they
  are not intended to be modifiable by implementers, operators, or end
  users.  These constants are given symbolic names here to facilitate
  the writing of future standards that may want to reference this
  document with different values for these named constants; however,
  at the present time no such future standards exist.)

  PROBE_WAIT           1 second   (initial random delay)
  PROBE_NUM            3          (number of probe packets)
  PROBE_MIN            1 second   (minimum delay until repeated probe)
  PROBE_MAX            2 seconds  (maximum delay until repeated probe)
  ANNOUNCE_WAIT        2 seconds  (delay before announcing)
  ANNOUNCE_NUM         2          (number of Announcement packets)
  ANNOUNCE_INTERVAL    2 seconds  (time between Announcement packets)
  MAX_CONFLICTS       10          (max conflicts before rate-limiting)
  RATE_LIMIT_INTERVAL 60 seconds  (delay between successive attempts)
  DEFEND_INTERVAL     10 seconds  (minimum interval between defensive
                                   ARPs)
1.2.  Relationship to RFC 826

  This document does not modify any of the protocol rules in RFC 826.
  It does not modify the packet format, or the meaning of any of the
  fields.  The existing rules for "Packet Generation" and "Packet
  Reception" still apply exactly as specified in RFC 826.

  This document expands on RFC 826 by specifying:

  (1) that a specific ARP Request should be generated when an interface
      is configured, to discover if the address is already in use, and






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  (2) an additional trivial test that should be performed on each
      received ARP packet, to facilitate passive ongoing conflict
      detection.  This additional test creates no additional packet
      overhead on the network (no additional packets are sent) and
      negligible additional CPU burden on hosts, since every host
      implementing ARP is *already* required to process every received
      ARP packet according to the Packet Reception rules specified in
      RFC 826.  These rules already include checking to see if the
      'sender IP address' of the ARP packet appears in any of the
      entries in the host's ARP cache; the additional test is simply to
      check to see if the 'sender IP address' is the host's *own* IP
      address, potentially as little as a single additional machine
      instruction on many architectures.

  As already specified in RFC 826, an ARP Request packet serves two
  functions, an assertion and a question:

  * Assertion:
     The fields 'ar$sha' (Sender Hardware Address) and 'ar$spa' (Sender
     Protocol Address) together serve as an assertion of a fact: that
     the stated Protocol Address is mapped to the stated Hardware
     Address.

  * Question:
     The fields 'ar$tha' (Target Hardware Address, zero) and 'ar$tpa'
     (Target Protocol Address) serve as a question, asking, for the
     stated Protocol Address, to which Hardware Address it is mapped.

  This document clarifies what it means to have one without the other.

  Some readers pointed out that it is probably impossible to ask any
  truly pure question; asking any question necessarily invites
  speculation about why the interrogator wants to know the answer.
  Just as someone pointing to an empty seat and asking, "Is anyone
  sitting here?" implies an unspoken "... because if not then I will,"
  the same is true here.  An ARP Probe with an all-zero 'sender IP
  address' may ostensibly be merely asking an innocent question ("Is
  anyone using this address?"), but an intelligent implementation that
  knows how IPv4 Address Conflict Detection works should be able to
  recognize this question as the precursor to claiming the address.

  Consequently, if that implementation is also, at that exact moment,
  in the process of asking the very same question, it should recognize
  that they can't both sit in the same seat, so it would be prudent to
  ask about some other seat.






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1.2.1.  Broadcast ARP Replies

  In some applications of IPv4 Address Conflict Detection (ACD), it may
  be advantageous to deliver ARP Replies using broadcast instead of
  unicast because this allows address conflicts to be detected sooner
  than might otherwise happen.  For example, "Dynamic Configuration of
  IPv4 Link-Local Addresses" [RFC3927] uses ACD exactly as specified
  here, but additionally specifies that ARP Replies should be sent
  using broadcast, because in that context the trade-off of increased
  broadcast traffic in exchange for improved reliability and fault-
  tolerance was deemed to be an appropriate one.  There may be other
  future specifications where the same trade-off is appropriate.
  Additional details are given in Section 2.6, "Broadcast ARP Replies".

  RFC 826 implies that replies to ARP Requests are usually delivered
  using unicast, but it is also acceptable to deliver ARP Replies using
  broadcast.  The Packet Reception rules in RFC 826 specify that the
  content of the 'ar$spa' field should be processed *before* examining
  the 'ar$op' field, so any host that correctly implements the Packet
  Reception algorithm specified in RFC 826 will correctly handle ARP
  Replies delivered via link-layer broadcast.

1.3.  Applicability

  This specification applies to all IEEE 802 Local Area Networks (LANs)
  [802], including Ethernet [802.3], Token-Ring [802.5], and IEEE
  802.11 wireless LANs [802.11], as well as to other link-layer
  technologies that operate at data rates of at least 1 Mb/s, have a
  round-trip latency of at most one second, and use ARP [RFC826] to map
  from IP addresses to link-layer hardware addresses.  Wherever this
  document uses the term "IEEE 802", the text applies equally to any of
  these network technologies.

  Link-layer technologies that support ARP but operate at rates below
  1 Mb/s or latencies above one second will still work correctly with
  this protocol, but more often may have to handle late conflicts
  detected after the Probing phase has completed.  On these kinds of
  links, it may be desirable to specify different values for the
  following parameters:

  (a) PROBE_NUM, PROBE_MIN, and PROBE_MAX, the number of, and interval
      between, ARP Probes, explained in Section 2.1.

  (b) ANNOUNCE_NUM and ANNOUNCE_INTERVAL, the number of, and interval
      between, ARP Announcements, explained in Section 2.3.






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  (c) RATE_LIMIT_INTERVAL and MAX_CONFLICTS, controlling the maximum
      rate at which address claiming may be attempted, explained in
      Section 2.1.

  (d) DEFEND_INTERVAL, the time interval between conflicting ARPs below
      which a host MUST NOT attempt to defend its address, explained in
      Section 2.4.

  Link-layer technologies that do not support ARP may be able to use
  other techniques for determining whether a particular IP address is
  currently in use.  However, implementing Address Conflict Detection
  for such networks is outside the scope of this document.

  For the protocol specified in this document to be effective, it is
  not necessary that all hosts on the link implement it.  For a given
  host implementing this specification to be protected against
  accidental address conflicts, all that is required is that the peers
  on the same link correctly implement the ARP protocol as given in
  RFC 826.  To be specific, when a peer host receives an ARP Request
  where the Target Protocol Address of the ARP Request matches (one of)
  that host's IP address(es) configured on that interface, then as long
  as it properly responds with a correctly-formatted ARP Reply, the
  querying host will be able to detect that the address is already in
  use.

  The specifications in this document allow hosts to detect conflicts
  between two hosts using the same address on the same physical link.
  ACD does not detect conflicts between two hosts using the same
  address on different physical links, and indeed it should not.
  For example, the address 10.0.0.1 [RFC1918] is in use by countless
  devices on countless private networks throughout the world, and this
  is not a conflict, because they are on different links.  It would
  only be a conflict if two such devices were to be connected to the
  same link, and when this happens (as it sometimes does), this is a
  perfect example of a situation where ACD is extremely useful to
  detect and report (and/or automatically correct) this error.

  For the purposes of this document, a set of hosts is considered to be
  "on the same link" if:

  -  when any host, A, from that set, sends a packet to any other host,
     B, in that set, using unicast, multicast, or broadcast, the entire
     link-layer packet payload arrives unmodified, and

  -  a broadcast sent over that link by any host from that set of hosts
     can be received by every other host in that set.





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  The link-layer *header* may be modified, such as in Token Ring Source
  Routing [802.5], but not the link-layer *payload*.  In particular, if
  any device forwarding a packet modifies any part of the IP header or
  IP payload, then the packet is no longer considered to be on the same
  link.  This means that the packet may pass through devices such as
  repeaters, bridges, hubs, or switches and still be considered to be
  on the same link for the purpose of this document, but not through a
  device such as an IP router that decrements the TTL or otherwise
  modifies the IP header.

  Where this document uses the term "host", it applies equally to
  interfaces on routers or other multi-homed hosts, regardless of
  whether the host/router is currently forwarding packets.  In many
  cases a router will be critical network infrastructure with an IP
  address that is locally well known and assumed to be relatively
  constant.  For example, the address of the default router is one of
  the parameters that a DHCP server typically communicates to its
  clients, and (at least until mechanisms like DHCP Reconfigure
  [RFC3203] become widely implemented) there isn't any practical way
  for the DHCP server to inform clients if that address changes.
  Consequently, for such devices, handling conflicts by picking a new
  IP address is not a good option.  In those cases, option (c) in
  Section 2.4 ("Ongoing Address Conflict Detection and Address
  Defense") applies.

  However, even when a device is manually configured with a fixed
  address, having some other device on the network claiming to have the
  same IP address will pollute peer ARP caches and prevent reliable
  communication, so it is still helpful to inform the operator.  If a
  conflict is detected at the time the operator sets the fixed manual
  address, then it is helpful to inform the operator immediately; if a
  conflict is detected subsequently, it is helpful to inform the
  operator via some appropriate asynchronous communication channel.
  Even though reliable communication via the conflicted address is not
  possible, it may still be possible to inform the operator via some
  other communication channel that is still operating, such as via some
  other interface on the router, via a dynamic IPv4 link-local address,
  via a working IPv6 address, or even via some completely different
  non-IP technology such as a locally-attached screen or serial
  console.

2.  Address Probing, Announcing, Conflict Detection, and Defense

  This section describes initial probing to safely determine whether an
  address is already in use, announcing the chosen address, ongoing
  conflict checking, and optional use of broadcast ARP Replies to
  provide faster conflict detection.




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2.1.  Probing an Address

  Before beginning to use an IPv4 address (whether received from manual
  configuration, DHCP, or some other means), a host implementing this
  specification MUST test to see if the address is already in use, by
  broadcasting ARP Probe packets.  This also applies when a network
  interface transitions from an inactive to an active state, when a
  computer awakes from sleep, when a link-state change signals that an
  Ethernet cable has been connected, when an 802.11 wireless interface
  associates with a new base station, or when any other change in
  connectivity occurs where a host becomes actively connected to a
  logical link.

  A host MUST NOT perform this check periodically as a matter of
  course.  This would be a waste of network bandwidth, and is
  unnecessary due to the ability of hosts to passively discover
  conflicts, as described in Section 2.4.

2.1.1.  Probe Details

  A host probes to see if an address is already in use by broadcasting
  an ARP Request for the desired address.  The client MUST fill in the
  'sender hardware address' field of the ARP Request with the hardware
  address of the interface through which it is sending the packet.  The
  'sender IP address' field MUST be set to all zeroes; this is to avoid
  polluting ARP caches in other hosts on the same link in the case
  where the address turns out to be already in use by another host.
  The 'target hardware address' field is ignored and SHOULD be set to
  all zeroes.  The 'target IP address' field MUST be set to the address
  being probed.  An ARP Request constructed this way, with an all-zero
  'sender IP address', is referred to as an 'ARP Probe'.

  When ready to begin probing, the host should then wait for a random
  time interval selected uniformly in the range zero to PROBE_WAIT
  seconds, and should then send PROBE_NUM probe packets, each of these
  probe packets spaced randomly and uniformly, PROBE_MIN to PROBE_MAX
  seconds apart.  This initial random delay helps ensure that a large
  number of hosts powered on at the same time do not all send their
  initial probe packets simultaneously.

  If during this period, from the beginning of the probing process
  until ANNOUNCE_WAIT seconds after the last probe packet is sent, the
  host receives any ARP packet (Request *or* Reply) on the interface
  where the probe is being performed, where the packet's 'sender IP
  address' is the address being probed for, then the host MUST treat
  this address as being in use by some other host, and should indicate
  to the configuring agent (human operator, DHCP server, etc.) that the
  proposed address is not acceptable.



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  In addition, if during this period the host receives any ARP Probe
  where the packet's 'target IP address' is the address being probed
  for, and the packet's 'sender hardware address' is not the hardware
  address of any of the host's interfaces, then the host SHOULD
  similarly treat this as an address conflict and signal an error to
  the configuring agent as above.  This can occur if two (or more)
  hosts have, for whatever reason, been inadvertently configured with
  the same address, and both are simultaneously in the process of
  probing that address to see if it can safely be used.

  NOTE: The check that the packet's 'sender hardware address' is not
  the hardware address of any of the host's interfaces is important.
  Some kinds of Ethernet hub (often called a "buffered repeater") and
  many wireless access points may "rebroadcast" any received broadcast
  packets to all recipients, including the original sender itself.  For
  this reason, the precaution described above is necessary to ensure
  that a host is not confused when it sees its own ARP packets echoed
  back.

  A host implementing this specification MUST take precautions to limit
  the rate at which it probes for new candidate addresses: if the host
  experiences MAX_CONFLICTS or more address conflicts on a given
  interface, then the host MUST limit the rate at which it probes for
  new addresses on this interface to no more than one attempted new
  address per RATE_LIMIT_INTERVAL.  This is to prevent catastrophic ARP
  storms in pathological failure cases, such as a defective DHCP server
  that repeatedly assigns the same address to every host that asks for
  one.  This rate-limiting rule applies not only to conflicts
  experienced during the initial probing phase, but also to conflicts
  experienced later, as described in Section 2.4 "Ongoing Address
  Conflict Detection and Address Defense".

  If, by ANNOUNCE_WAIT seconds after the transmission of the last ARP
  Probe no conflicting ARP Reply or ARP Probe has been received, then
  the host has successfully determined that the desired address may be
  used safely.

2.2.  Shorter Timeouts on Appropriate Network Technologies

  Network technologies may emerge for which shorter delays are
  appropriate than those required by this document.  A subsequent IETF
  publication may be produced providing guidelines for different values
  for PROBE_WAIT, PROBE_NUM, PROBE_MIN, and PROBE_MAX on those
  technologies.

  If the situation arises where different hosts on a link are using
  different timing parameters, this does not cause any problems.  This
  protocol is not dependent on all hosts on a link implementing the



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  same version of the protocol; indeed, this protocol is not dependent
  on all hosts on a link implementing the protocol at all.  All that is
  required is that all hosts implement ARP as specified in RFC 826, and
  correctly answer ARP Requests they receive.  In the situation where
  different hosts are using different timing parameters, all that will
  happen is that some hosts will configure their interfaces more
  quickly than others.  In the unlikely event that an address conflict
  is not detected during the address probing phase, the conflict will
  still be detected by the Ongoing Address Conflict Detection described
  below in Section 2.4.

2.3.  Announcing an Address

  Having probed to determine that a desired address may be used safely,
  a host implementing this specification MUST then announce that it
  is commencing to use this address by broadcasting ANNOUNCE_NUM ARP
  Announcements, spaced ANNOUNCE_INTERVAL seconds apart.  An ARP
  Announcement is identical to the ARP Probe described above, except
  that now the sender and target IP addresses are both set to the
  host's newly selected IPv4 address.  The purpose of these ARP
  Announcements is to make sure that other hosts on the link do not
  have stale ARP cache entries left over from some other host that may
  previously have been using the same address.  The host may begin
  legitimately using the IP address immediately after sending the first
  of the two ARP Announcements; the sending of the second ARP
  Announcement may be completed asynchronously, concurrent with other
  networking operations the host may wish to perform.

2.4.  Ongoing Address Conflict Detection and Address Defense

  Address Conflict Detection is not limited to only the time of initial
  interface configuration, when a host is sending ARP Probes.  Address
  Conflict Detection is an ongoing process that is in effect for as
  long as a host is using an address.  At any time, if a host receives
  an ARP packet (Request *or* Reply) where the 'sender IP address' is
  (one of) the host's own IP address(es) configured on that interface,
  but the 'sender hardware address' does not match any of the host's
  own interface addresses, then this is a conflicting ARP packet,
  indicating some other host also thinks it is validly using this
  address.  To resolve the address conflict, a host MUST respond to a
  conflicting ARP packet as described in either (a), (b), or (c) below:

  (a) Upon receiving a conflicting ARP packet, a host MAY elect to
      immediately cease using the address, and signal an error to the
      configuring agent as described above.






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  (b) If a host currently has active TCP connections or other reasons
      to prefer to keep the same IPv4 address, and it has not seen any
      other conflicting ARP packets within the last DEFEND_INTERVAL
      seconds, then it MAY elect to attempt to defend its address by
      recording the time that the conflicting ARP packet was received,
      and then broadcasting one single ARP Announcement, giving its own
      IP and hardware addresses as the sender addresses of the ARP,
      with the 'target IP address' set to its own IP address, and the
      'target hardware address' set to all zeroes.  Having done this,
      the host can then continue to use the address normally without
      any further special action.  However, if this is not the first
      conflicting ARP packet the host has seen, and the time recorded
      for the previous conflicting ARP packet is recent, within
      DEFEND_INTERVAL seconds, then the host MUST immediately cease
      using this address and signal an error to the configuring agent
      as described above.  This is necessary to ensure that two hosts
      do not get stuck in an endless loop with both hosts trying to
      defend the same address.

  (c) If a host has been configured such that it should not give up its
      address under any circumstances (perhaps because it is the kind
      of device that needs to have a well-known stable IP address, such
      as a link's default router or a DNS server) then it MAY elect to
      defend its address indefinitely.  If such a host receives a
      conflicting ARP packet, then it should take appropriate steps to
      log useful information such as source Ethernet address from the
      ARP packet, and inform an administrator of the problem.  The
      number of such notifications should be appropriately controlled
      to prevent an excessive number of error reports being generated.
      If the host has not seen any other conflicting ARP packets
      recently, within the last DEFEND_INTERVAL seconds, then it MUST
      record the time that the conflicting ARP packet was received, and
      then broadcast one single ARP Announcement, giving its own IP and
      hardware addresses.  Having done this, the host can then continue
      to use the address normally without any further special action.
      However, if this is not the first conflicting ARP packet the host
      has seen, and the time recorded for the previous conflicting ARP
      packet is within DEFEND_INTERVAL seconds, then the host MUST NOT
      send another defensive ARP Announcement.  This is necessary to
      ensure that two misconfigured hosts do not get stuck in an
      endless loop flooding the network with broadcast traffic while
      they both try to defend the same address.

  A host wishing to provide reliable network operation MUST respond to
  conflicting ARP packets as described in (a), (b), or (c) above.
  Ignoring conflicting ARP packets results in seemingly random network
  failures that can be hard to diagnose and very frustrating for human
  users.



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  Forced address reconfiguration may be disruptive, causing TCP (and
  other transport-layer) connections to be broken.  However, such
  disruptions should be exceedingly rare, and if inadvertent address
  duplication happens, then disruption of communication is inevitable.
  It is not possible for two different hosts using the same IP address
  on the same network to operate reliably.

  Before abandoning an address due to a conflict, hosts SHOULD actively
  attempt to reset any existing connections using that address.  This
  mitigates some security threats posed by address reconfiguration, as
  discussed in Section 5.

  For most client machines that do not need a fixed IP address,
  immediately requesting the configuring agent (human user, DHCP
  client, etc.) to configure a new address as soon as the conflict is
  detected is the best way to restore useful communication as quickly
  as possible.  The mechanism described above of broadcasting a single
  ARP Announcement to defend the address mitigates the problem
  somewhat, by helping to improve the chance that one of the two
  conflicting hosts may be able to retain its address.

2.5.  Continuing Operation

  From the time a host sends its first ARP Announcement, until the
  time it ceases using that IP address, the host MUST answer ARP
  Requests in the usual way required by the ARP specification [RFC826].
  Specifically, this means that whenever a host receives an ARP
  Request, that's not a conflicting ARP packet as described above in
  Section 2.4, where the 'target IP address' of the ARP Request is (one
  of) the host's own IP address(es) configured on that interface, the
  host MUST respond with an ARP Reply as described in RFC 826.  This
  applies equally for both standard ARP Requests with non-zero sender
  IP addresses and Probe Requests with all-zero sender IP addresses.

2.6.  Broadcast ARP Replies

  In a carefully-run network with manually-assigned addresses, or
  a network with a reliable DHCP server and reliable DHCP clients,
  address conflicts should occur only in rare failure scenarios, so
  the passive monitoring described above in Section 2.4 is adequate.
  If two hosts are using the same IP address, then sooner or later one
  host or the other will broadcast an ARP Request, which the other will
  see, allowing the conflict to be detected and consequently resolved.

  It is possible, however, that a conflicting configuration may persist
  for a short time before it is detected.  Suppose that two hosts, A
  and B, have been inadvertently assigned the same IP address, X.
  Suppose further that at the time they were both probing to determine



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RFC 5227            IPv4 Address Conflict Detection            July 2008


  whether the address could safely be used, the communication link
  between them was non-functional for some reason, so neither detected
  the conflict at interface-configuration time.  Suppose now that the
  communication link is restored, and a third host, C, broadcasts an
  ARP Request for address X.  Unaware of any conflict, both hosts A and
  B will send unicast ARP Replies to host C.  Host C will see both
  Replies, and may be a little confused, but neither host A nor B will
  see the other's Reply, and neither will immediately detect that there
  is a conflict to be resolved.  Hosts A and B will continue to be
  unaware of the conflict until one or other broadcasts an ARP Request
  of their own.

  If quicker conflict detection is desired, this may be achieved by
  having hosts send ARP Replies using link-level broadcast, instead of
  sending only ARP Requests via broadcast, and Replies via unicast.
  This is NOT RECOMMENDED for general use, but other specifications
  building on IPv4 ACD may choose to specify broadcast ARP Replies if
  appropriate.  For example, "Dynamic Configuration of IPv4 Link-Local
  Addresses" [RFC3927] specifies broadcast ARP Replies because in that
  context, detection of address conflicts using IPv4 ACD is not merely
  a backup precaution to detect failures of some other configuration
  mechanism; detection of address conflicts using IPv4 ACD is the sole
  configuration mechanism.

  Sending ARP Replies using broadcast does increase broadcast traffic,
  but in the worst case by no more than a factor of two.  In the
  traditional usage of ARP, a unicast ARP Reply only occurs in response
  to a broadcast ARP Request, so sending these via broadcast instead
  means that we generate at most one broadcast Reply in response to
  each existing broadcast Request.  On many networks, ARP traffic is
  such an insignificant proportion of the total traffic that doubling
  it makes no practical difference.  However, this may not be true of
  all networks, so broadcast ARP Replies SHOULD NOT be used
  universally.  Broadcast ARP Replies should be used where the benefit
  of faster conflict detection outweighs the cost of increased
  broadcast traffic and increased packet processing load on the
  participant network hosts.

3.  Why Are ARP Announcements Performed Using ARP Request Packets and
   Not ARP Reply Packets?

  During IETF deliberation of IPv4 Address Conflict Detection from 2000
  to 2008, a question that was asked repeatedly was, "Shouldn't ARP
  Announcements be performed using gratuitous ARP Reply packets?"

  On the face of it, this seems reasonable.  A conventional ARP Reply
  is an answer to a question.  If in fact no question had been asked,
  then it would be reasonable to describe such a reply as gratuitous.



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  The term "gratuitous reply" would seem to apply perfectly to an ARP
  Announcement: an answer to an implied question that in fact no one
  asked.

  However reasonable this may seem in principle, in practice there are
  two reasons that swing the argument in favor of using ARP Request
  packets.  One is historical precedent, and the other is pragmatism.

  The historical precedent is that (as described above in Section 4)
  Gratuitous ARP is documented in Stevens Networking [Ste94] as using
  ARP Request packets.  BSD Unix, Microsoft Windows, Mac OS 9, Mac OS
  X, etc., all use ARP Request packets as described in Stevens.  At
  this stage, trying to mandate that they all switch to using ARP Reply
  packets would be futile.

  The practical reason is that ARP Request packets are more likely to
  work correctly with more existing ARP implementations, some of which
  may not implement RFC 826 entirely correctly.  The Packet Reception
  rules in RFC 826 state that the opcode is the last thing to check in
  packet processing, so it really shouldn't matter, but there may be
  "creative" implementations that have different packet processing
  depending on the 'ar$op' field, and there are several reasons why
  these are more likely to accept gratuitous ARP Requests than
  gratuitous ARP Replies:

  * An incorrect ARP implementation may expect that ARP Replies are
    only sent via unicast.  RFC 826 does not say this, but an incorrect
    implementation may assume it; the "principle of least surprise"
    dictates that where there are two or more ways to solve a
    networking problem that are otherwise equally good, the one with
    the fewest unusual properties is the one likely to have the fewest
    interoperability problems with existing implementations.  An ARP
    Announcement needs to broadcast information to all hosts on the
    link.  Since ARP Request packets are always broadcast, and ARP
    Reply packets are not, receiving an ARP Request packet via
    broadcast is less surprising than receiving an ARP Reply packet via
    broadcast.

  * An incorrect ARP implementation may expect that ARP Replies are
    only received in response to ARP Requests that have been issued
    recently by that implementation.  Unexpected unsolicited Replies
    may be ignored.

  * An incorrect ARP implementation may ignore ARP Replies where
    'ar$tha' doesn't match its hardware address.

  * An incorrect ARP implementation may ignore ARP Replies where
    'ar$tpa' doesn't match its IP address.



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  In summary, there are more ways that an incorrect ARP implementation
  might plausibly reject an ARP Reply (which usually occurs as a result
  of being solicited by the client) than an ARP Request (which is
  already expected to occur unsolicited).

4.  Historical Note

  Some readers have claimed that "Gratuitous ARP", as described in
  Stevens [Ste94], provides duplicate address detection, making ACD
  unnecessary.  This is incorrect.  What Stevens describes as
  Gratuitous ARP is the exact same packet that this document refers to
  by the more descriptive term 'ARP Announcement'.  This traditional
  Gratuitous ARP implementation sends only a single ARP Announcement
  when an interface is first configured.  The result is that the victim
  (the existing address holder) logs an error, and the offender
  continues operation, often without even detecting any problem.  Both
  machines then typically proceed to try to use the same IP address,
  and fail to operate properly because they are each constantly
  resetting the other's TCP connections.  The human administrator is
  expected to notice the log message on the victim machine and repair
  the damage after the fact.  Typically this has to be done by
  physically going to the machines in question, since in this state
  neither is able to keep a TCP connection open for long enough to do
  anything useful over the network.

  Gratuitous ARP does not in fact provide effective duplicate address
  detection and (as of January 2008) many of the top results for a
  Google search for the phrase "Gratuitous ARP" are articles describing
  how to disable it.

  However, implementers of IPv4 Address Conflict Detection should be
  aware that, as of this writing, Gratuitous ARP is still widely
  deployed.  The steps described in Sections 2.1 and 2.4 of this
  document help make a host robust against misconfiguration and address
  conflicts, even when the other host is *not* playing by the same
  rules.

5.  Security Considerations

  IPv4 Address Conflict Detection (ACD) is based on ARP [RFC826] and it
  inherits the security vulnerabilities of that protocol.  A malicious
  host may send fraudulent ARP packets on the network, interfering with
  the correct operation of other hosts.  For example, it is easy for a
  host to answer all ARP Requests with Replies giving its own hardware
  address, thereby claiming ownership of every address on the network.






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RFC 5227            IPv4 Address Conflict Detection            July 2008


  This specification makes this existing ARP vulnerability no worse,
  and in some ways makes it better: instead of failing silently with no
  indication why, hosts implementing this specification either attempt
  to reconfigure automatically, or at least inform the human user of
  what is happening.

  If a host willingly selects a new address in response to an ARP
  conflict, as described in Section 2.4, subsection (a), this
  potentially makes it easier for malicious attackers on the same link
  to hijack TCP connections.  Having a host actively reset any existing
  connections before abandoning an address helps mitigate this risk.

6.  Acknowledgments

  This document arose as a result of Zeroconf Working Group discussions
  on IPv4 Link-Local Addressing [RFC3927], where it was not clear to
  many participants which elements of link-local address management
  were specific to that particular problem space (e.g., random
  selection of an address), and which elements were generic and
  applicable to all IPv4 address configuration mechanisms (e.g., the
  detection of address conflicts).  The following people made valuable
  comments in the course of that work and/or the subsequent editing of
  this document: Bernard Aboba, Randy Bush, Jim Busse, James Carlson,
  Alan Cox, Spencer Dawkins, Pavani Diwanji, Ralph Droms, Donald
  Eastlake III, Alex Elder, Stephen Farrell, Peter Ford, Spencer
  Giacalone, Josh Graessley, Erik Guttman, Myron Hattig, Mike Heard,
  Hugh Holbrook, Richard Johnson, Kim Yong-Woon, Marc Krochmal, Rod
  Lopez, Rory McGuire, Satish Mundra, Thomas Narten, Erik Nordmark,
  Randy Presuhn, Howard Ridenour, Pekka Savola, Daniel Senie, Dieter
  Siegmund, Valery Smyslov, Mark Townsley, Oleg Tychev, and Ryan Troll.

7.  References

7.1.  Normative References

  [RFC826]  Plummer, D., "An Ethernet Address Resolution Protocol
            -- or -- Converting Network Protocol Addresses to 48.bit
            Ethernet Address for Transmission on Ethernet Hardware",
            STD 37, RFC 826, November 1982.

  [RFC2119] Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate
            Requirement Levels", BCP 14, RFC 2119, March 1997.









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7.2.  Informative References

  [802]     IEEE Standards for Local and Metropolitan Area Networks:
            Overview and Architecture, ANSI/IEEE Std 802, 1990.

  [802.3]   ISO/IEC 8802-3 Information technology - Telecommunications
            and information exchange between systems - Local and
            metropolitan area networks - Common specifications - Part
            3:  Carrier Sense Multiple Access with Collision Detection
            (CSMA/CD) Access Method and Physical Layer Specifications,
            (also ANSI/IEEE Std 802.3-1996), 1996.

  [802.5]   ISO/IEC 8802-5 Information technology - Telecommunications
            and information exchange between systems - Local and
            metropolitan area networks - Common specifications -
            Part 5: Token ring access method and physical layer
            specifications, (also ANSI/IEEE Std 802.5-1998), 1998.

  [802.11]  Information technology - Telecommunications and information
            exchange between systems - Local and metropolitan area
            networks - Specific Requirements Part 11:  Wireless LAN
            Medium Access Control (MAC) and Physical Layer (PHY)
            Specifications, IEEE Std. 802.11-1999, 1999.

  [RFC1918] Rekhter, Y., Moskowitz, B., Karrenberg, D., de Groot, G.,
            and E. Lear, "Address Allocation for Private Internets",
            BCP 5, RFC 1918, February 1996.

  [RFC2131] Droms, R., "Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol", RFC 2131,
            March 1997.

  [RFC3203] T'Joens, Y., Hublet, C., and P. De Schrijver, "DHCP
            reconfigure extension", RFC 3203, December 2001.

  [RFC3927] Cheshire, S., Aboba, B., and E. Guttman, "Dynamic
            Configuration of IPv4 Link-Local Addresses", RFC 3927, May
            2005.

  [Ste94]   W. Stevens, "TCP/IP Illustrated, Volume 1: The Protocols",
            Addison-Wesley, 1994.











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Author's Address

  Stuart Cheshire
  Apple Inc.
  1 Infinite Loop
  Cupertino
  California 95014
  USA

  Phone: +1 408 974 3207
  EMail: [email protected]








































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Full Copyright Statement

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  contained in BCP 78, and except as set forth therein, the authors
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