On Mon, 2 Nov 2020 15:56:43 +0800 LIU Yulong wrote: > According to the RFC 2464 [1] the prefix "33:33:xx:xx:xx:xx" is defined to > construct the multicast destination MAC address for IPv6 multicast traffic. > The NDP (Neighbor Discovery Protocol for IPv6)[2] will comply with such > rule. The work steps [6] are: > *) Let's assume a destination address of 2001:db8:1:1::1. > *) This is mapped into the "Solicited Node Multicast Address" (SNMA) > format of ff02::1:ffXX:XXXX. > *) The XX:XXXX represent the last 24 bits of the SNMA, and are derived > directly from the last 24 bits of the destination address. > *) Resulting in a SNMA ff02::1:ff00:0001, or ff02::1:ff00:1. > *) This, being a multicast address, can be mapped to a multicast MAC > address, using the format 33-33-XX-XX-XX-XX > *) Resulting in 33-33-ff-00-00-01. > *) This is a MAC address that is only being listened for by nodes > sharing the same last 24 bits. > *) In other words, while there is a chance for a "address collision", > it is a vast improvement over ARP's guaranteed "collision". > Kernel related code can be found at [3][4][5].
Please make sure you keep maintainers CCed on your postings, adding bond maintainers now. > +static inline bool is_ipv6_multicast_ether_addr(const u8 *addr) > +{ > + return (addr[0] == 0x33) && (addr[1] == 0x33); > +} nit: brackets are not necessary here.