| ▲ | mort96 4 hours ago | ||||||||||||||||
I don't like this post's negativity towards ARP. ARP is the reason we can have IP networking on a LAN without a router. The default gateway just becomes a special case of general IP networking on a LAN. Otherwise, the networking history part of this post is amazing. I haven't gotten to the IPv6 part yet. | |||||||||||||||||
| ▲ | jcgl 3 hours ago | parent [-] | ||||||||||||||||
But it's not the only way to tackle the problem of resolving layer 2 addresses, and you can do so without introducing the layering violations and expansive broadcast traffic that ARP implies (along with the consequent problems with WiFi and such). For instance, IPv6's NDP is built on actual IPv6 packets (ICMPv6), rather than some spoofed IP-lookalike thing. No layering violation, and, thanks to multicasting, no need to dump a bunch of broadcast traffic on the layer 2 network. | |||||||||||||||||
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