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IPv6 Neighbor Discovery Optimizations for Wired and Wireless Networks
draft-chakrabarti-nordmark-6man-efficient-nd-07

Document Type Expired Internet-Draft (individual)
Expired & archived
Authors Samita Chakrabarti , Erik Nordmark , Pascal Thubert , Margaret Cullen
Last updated 2015-08-31 (Latest revision 2015-02-27)
Replaces draft-chakrabarti-nordmark-energy-aware-nd
RFC stream (None)
Intended RFC status (None)
Formats
Stream Stream state (No stream defined)
Consensus boilerplate Unknown
RFC Editor Note (None)
IESG IESG state Expired
Telechat date (None)
Responsible AD (None)
Send notices to (None)

This Internet-Draft is no longer active. A copy of the expired Internet-Draft is available in these formats:

Abstract

IPv6 Neighbor Discovery (RFC 4861 going back to RFC 1970) was defined at a time when link-local multicast was as reliable and with the same network cost (send a packet on a yellow-coax Ethernet) as unicast and where the hosts were assumed to be always on and connected. Since 1996 we've seen a significant change with both an introduction of wireless networks and battery operated devices, which poses significant challenges for the old assumptions. We are also seeing datacenter networks where virtual machines are not always on and connected, and scaling of multicast can be challenging. This specification contains extensions to IPv6 Neighbor Discovery which remove most use of multicast and make sleeping hosts more efficient. The specification includes a default mixed mode where a link can have an arbitrary mix of hosts and/or routers - some implementing legacy Neighbor Discovery and some implementing the optimizations in this specification. The optimizations provide incremental benefits to hosts as soon as the first updated routers are deployed on a link.

Authors

Samita Chakrabarti
Erik Nordmark
Pascal Thubert
Margaret Cullen

(Note: The e-mail addresses provided for the authors of this Internet-Draft may no longer be valid.)