Arp operation – H3C Technologies H3C WX6000 Series Access Controllers User Manual

Page 159

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22-2

Protocol type: This field specifies the type of the protocol address to be mapped. The hexadecimal

value “0x0800” represents IP.

Hardware address length and protocol address length: They respectively specify the length of a

hardware address and a protocol address, in bytes. For an Ethernet address, the value of the

hardware address length field is "6”. For an IP(v4) address, the value of the protocol address length

field is “4”.

OP: Operation code. This field specifies the type of the ARP message. The value “1” represents an

ARP request and “2” represents an ARP reply.

Sender hardware address: This field specifies the hardware address of the device sending the

message.

Sender protocol address: This field specifies the protocol address of the device sending the

message.

Target hardware address: This field specifies the hardware address of the device the message is

being sent to.

Target protocol address: This field specifies the protocol address of the device the message is

being sent to.

ARP Operation

Suppose that Host A and Host B are on the same subnet and Host A sends a packet to Host B, as

shown in

Figure 22-2

. The resolution process is as follows:

Host A looks into its ARP table to see whether there is an ARP entry for Host B. If yes, Host A uses

the MAC address in the entry to encapsulate the IP packet into a data link layer frame and sends

the frame to Host B.

If Host A finds no entry for Host B, Host A buffers the packet and broadcasts an ARP request, in

which the sender IP address and the sender MAC address are the IP address and the MAC

address of Host A respectively, and the target IP address and the target MAC address are the IP

address of Host B and an all-zero MAC address respectively. Because the ARP request is a

broadcast, all hosts on this subnet can receive the request, but only the requested host (namely,

Host B) will respond to the request.

Host B compares its own IP address with the destination IP address in the ARP request. If they are

the same, Host B saves the source IP address and source MAC address in its ARP table,

encapsulates its MAC address into an ARP reply, and unicasts the reply to Host A.

After receiving the ARP reply, Host A adds the MAC address of Host B to its ARP table. Meanwhile,

Host A encapsulates the IP packet and sends it out.

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