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4. Broadcast Classes
Connected: An Internet Encyclopedia
4. Broadcast Classes
Up:
Connected: An Internet Encyclopedia
Up:
Requests For Comments
Up:
RFC 919
Prev: 3. Why Broadcast?
Next: 5. Broadcast Methods
4. Broadcast Classes
4. Broadcast Classes
There are several classes of IP broadcasting:
- Single-destination datagram broadcast on the local IP net: A
datagrams is destined for a specific IP host, but the sending
host broadcasts it at the data link layer, perhaps to avoid
having to do routing. Since this is not an IP broadcast, the IP
layer is not involved, except that a host should discard
datagrams not meant for it without becoming flustered (i.e.,
printing an error message).
- Broadcast to all hosts on the local IP net: A distinguished
value for the host-number part of the IP address denotes
broadcast instead of a specific host. The receiving IP layer
must be able to recognize this address as well as its own.
However, it might still be useful to distinguish at higher
levels between broadcasts and non-broadcasts, especially in
gateways. This is the most useful case of broadcast; it allows a
host to discover gateways without wired-in tables, it is the
basis for address resolution protocols, and it is also useful
for accessing such utilities as name servers, time servers,
etc., without requiring wired-in addresses.
- Broadcast to all hosts on a remote IP network: It is
occasionally useful to send a broadcast to all hosts on a
non-local network; for example, to find the latest version of a
hostname database, to bootload a host on an IP network without a
bootserver, or to monitor the timeservers on the IP network.
This case is the same as local-network broadcasts; the datagram
is routed by normal mechanisms until it reaches a gateway
attached to the destination IP network, at which point it is
broadcast. This class of broadcasting is also known as "directed
broadcasting", or quaintly as sending a "letter bomb" [1].
- Broadcast to the entire Internet: This is probably not useful,
and almost certainly not desirable.
For reasons of performance or security, a gateway may choose not to
forward broadcasts; especially, it may be a good idea to ban
broadcasts into or out of an autonomous group of networks.
Next: 5. Broadcast Methods
Connected: An Internet Encyclopedia
4. Broadcast Classes
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