William Herrin wrote: > I think Masataka meant to say (and said previously) that the DHCP > request from the wifi station is, like all packets from the wifi > station to the AP, subject to wifi's layer 2 error recovery. It's not > unicast but its subject to error recovery anyway.
Mostly correct. But, as I already wrote: 1) broadcast/multicast from a STA attacked to an AP is actually unicast to the AP and reliably received by the AP (and relayed unreliably to other STAs). That is, a broadcast ARP request from the STA to the AP is reliably received by the AP. Because of hidden terminals, L2 broadcast/multicast is transmitted only from AP. >> However, at WiFi L2, it is first unicast to AP and then broadcast >> by the AP. > > Your use of nomenclature is incorrect. It'd be like saying my ethernet Ethernet? > card unicasts a packet to the switch and then the switch broadcasts it > out all ports. Or like saying that a packet with an explicit MAC > destination Do you know MAC header of 802.11 contains four, not just source and destination, MAC addresses? Because of hidden terminals and because of impossibility of collision detection, WLAN is a little more complex than your guess. > No offense, but it is not for you or I or Owen Delong to declare that > IPv6 is or isn't operational. A single counter example is enough to deny IPv6 operational. > whether and when IPv6 is sufficiently > operational for their use. The scope is not "their use" but "as a protocol for the entire Internet". Masataka Ohta