Hi Mathilde,

I appreciate the link to that description, as it raises some other questions
for me. In 6lowpan-nd it specifically says that anything but link-local is
off-link, in which case you wouldn't use the NC for anything but link-local
correct?

I had assumed the NC could be used to check if a specific address was
on-link or not in the absence of other information. From RFC4861 definition:

   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...


But 6lowpan-nd says anything but fe80:: is off-link. Thus if you have a
message to a global prefix device, you always send to the default router?

Thus lacking a routing protocol, how could a 6LR send a NA to a 6LN if that
6LN registered a global address? The 6lowpan-nd-examples currently have
this:

If Status is a Success:

    6LR ---------NA-Reg------->6LN
    Src= LL64 (6LR)
    Dst= GP16 (6LN)
    ARO with Status = 0

If this is 'illegal' then I take full credit for not fully understanding how
IPv6 works in creating that example ;-) But I think other people were
assuming that would work fine as well w/o a routing protocol.

Regards,

  -Colin

-----Original Message-----
From: Mathilde Durvy (mdurvy) [mailto:[email protected]] 
Sent: October 8, 2010 8:42 AM
To: Colin O'Flynn; [email protected]
Subject: RE: [6lowpan] 6lowpan-nd neighbour table collision

Hi Colin,

It seems to me that if the addresses are global, presumably built on a
off-link prefix there is no problem.

> The ABR is address fe80::33:44 so it will now send a multihop ND message.
> The regular IPv6 sending algorithm will first search the NC for
connectivity
> before sending through the default router (fe80::11:22). 

Actually what the IPv6 algorithm says is 
"  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"
"  Once the IP address of the next-hop node is known, the sender
   examines the Neighbor Cache for link-layer information about that
   neighbor."

Best,
Mathilde
_______________________________________________
6lowpan mailing list
[email protected]
https://www.ietf.org/mailman/listinfo/6lowpan

_______________________________________________
6lowpan mailing list
[email protected]
https://www.ietf.org/mailman/listinfo/6lowpan

Reply via email to