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by xp84
7 days ago
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I literally had to interrogate an LLM to explain what this was about, because to me, indeed, when I see 169.254 I think "Ah, someone unplugged something critical and the network is now completely down." I didn't even know that in ipv6 land there are any reasons to use link-local addresses for anything. I mean, there still basically isn't a reason for 99.99% of people, I think. But it's interesting. I also didn't realize that part of the idea behind these LL things was one of the rounds of wishful networking ideas of the 90s or 2000s, kind of a cousin of UPnP and mDNS in that way (in increasing order of eventual usefulness). Considered completely in a vacuum, especially ignoring the WAN, I can see how it seemed silly that if you plugged three computers and a printer into a switch, rolling random IP addresses like this could have allowed things to be discoverable and to function locally (I thought mDNS or "Bonjour"/"Rendezvous" as Apple called it came much later, but I know my PCs could "see" each other with NetBIOS or whatever long before mDNS was invented). |
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Broadcasts go to all IPv4 addresses in the subnet, multicasts only go to those who subscribed to a multicast group. To subscribe to a IPv6 multicast group you need an IPv6 address. So all IPv6 interfaces will have at least one LLA self-generated.
One thing that IPv6 uses multicast heavily for is NDP, which is the IPv6 version of ARP. This is how IP addresses on your LAN/WLAN are converted to MAC addresses which is required info for the NIC in your node to talk to another node on your Ethernet LAN/WLAN.
End users don't typically have to use LLAs directly but you can use them if you want to 100% ensure things won't leave your LAN as routers don't forward LLAs.