On 3/8/24 17:26, to...@tuxteam.de wrote:
It is not/for/  multicast IP, it/uses/  multicast for name resolution.
In a nutshell [1], it sends a "DNS" request to the local network asking
"who is called Fritz here?", and Fritz answers with its IP. So sys-non-
admins don't have to set up a name server.

To amplify on that, it is used in situations where there is no DHCP server.

IPv4 clients will then automatically assign themselves an address from 169.254.X.X/16 range (X.X is derived from the MAC address)

They then multicast their hostname and IP address to everyone else on the LAN using mDNS.

It is not a Microsoft only standard. It is defined in RFC 3927, "Dynamic Configuration of IPv4 Link-Local Addresses."

It is used on a wide variety of hosts including Linux.

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