Ethernet multicast mac address – H3C Technologies H3C S3100 Series Switches User Manual

Page 282

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1-9

Value

Meaning

E Global

scope

Group ID: 112 bits, IPv6 multicast group identifier that uniquely identifies an IPv6 multicast group in the

scope defined by the Scope field.

Ethernet multicast MAC address

When a unicast IP packet is transported in an Ethernet network, the destination MAC address is the

MAC address of the receiver. When a multicast packet is transported in an Ethernet network, a

multicast MAC address is used as the destination address because the destination is a group with an

uncertain number of members.

1) IPv4 multicast MAC addresses

As stipulated by IANA, the high-order 24 bits of a multicast MAC address are 0x01005e, while the

low-order 23 bits of a MAC address are the low-order 23 bits of the multicast IP address.

Figure 1-6

describes the mapping relationship:

Figure 1-6 Multicast address mapping

XXXX X

XXXX XXXX

XXXX XXXX

XXXX XXXX

1110 XXXX

0XXX XXXX

XXXX XXXX

XXXX XXXX

0000 0001

0000 0000

0101 1110

32-bit IP address

48-bit MAC address

5 bits lost

25-bit MAC address prefix

23 bits

mapped

The high-order four bits of the IP multicast address are 1110, representing the multicast ID. Only 23 bits

of the remaining 28 bits are mapped to a MAC address. Thus, five bits of the multicast IP address are

lost. As a result, 32 IP multicast addresses are mapped to the same MAC address.

2) IPv6 multicast MAC addresses

The high-order 16 bits of an IPv6 multicast MAC address are 0x3333, and the low-order 32 bits are the

low-order 32 bits of a multicast IPv6 address.

Figure 1-7

shows an example of mapping an IPv6

multicast address, FF1E::F30E:101, to a MAC address.

Figure 1-7 An example of IPv6-to-MAC address mapping

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