RFC 3307 (rfc3307) - Page 3 of 8
Allocation Guidelines for IPv6 Multicast Addresses
Alternative Format: Original Text Document
RFC 3307 IPv6 Multicast Addresses Guidelines August 2002
bits (henceforth called the group ID) of the IPv6 multicast address
and including them in the link-layer destination address. Group IDs,
less than or equal to, 32 bits long will generate unique link-layer
addresses within a given multicast scope.
These guidelines specify how the group ID of the IPv6 multicast
address are chosen and assigned. The guidelines specify several
mechanisms that can be used to determine the group ID of the
multicast address, based on the type of allocation being done.
3. Applicability
These guidelines are designed to be used in any environment in which
IPv6 multicast addresses are delegated, assigned, or selected. These
guidelines are not limited to use by MADCAP [RFC 2730] servers. The
following is a non-exhaustive list of applications of these
guidelines:
- Source-specific multicast application servers can generate an
SSM group address by generating a 96-bit multicast prefix, as
defined in [UNIMCAST] (i.e. FF3x::/96) and concatenating that
with a group ID, as defined in this document.
- A MADCAP server allocates IPv6 multicast addresses conforming
to section 2.7 of [ADDRARCH], creating the group ID using the
rules defined in this document.
- Nodes supplying multicast services in a zeroconf environment
generate multicast addresses without the need of centralized
control.
- IANA can assign permanent multicast addresses to fulfill
requests via the protocol standardization process.
4. Group ID Selection Guidelines
The Group ID selection process allows for three types of multicast
address assignments. These are permanent IPv6 multicast addresses,
dynamic IPv6 multicast addresses, and permanent IPv6 multicast group
IDs. The following guidelines assume that the prefix of the
multicast address has been initialized according to [ADDRARCH] or
[UNIMCAST].
Haberman Standards Track