Multicast address


A multicast address is a logical identifier for a group of hosts in a computer network that are available to process datagrams or frames intended to be multicast for a designated network service. Multicast addressing can be used in the link layer, such as Ethernet multicast, and at the internet layer for Internet Protocol Version 4 or Version 6 multicast.

IPv4

multicast addresses are defined by the most-significant bit pattern of 1110. This originates from the classful network design of the early Internet when this group of addresses was designated as Class D. The CIDR notation for this group is. The group includes the addresses from to. Address assignments from within this range are specified in RFC 5771, an Internet Engineering Task Force Best Current Practice document.
The address range is divided into blocks each assigned a specific purpose or behavior.
IP multicast address rangeDescriptionRoutable
224.0.0.0 to 224.0.0.255Local subnetwork
224.0.1.0 to 224.0.1.255Internetwork control
224.0.2.0 to 224.0.255.255AD-HOC block 1
224.3.0.0 to 224.4.255.255AD-HOC block 2
232.0.0.0 to 232.255.255.255Source-specific multicast
233.0.0.0 to 233.251.255.255GLOP addressing
233.252.0.0 to 233.255.255.255AD-HOC block 3
234.0.0.0 to 234.255.255.255Unicast-prefix-based
239.0.0.0 to 239.255.255.255Administratively scoped

;Local subnetwork
;Internetwork control block
;AD-HOC block
;Source-specific multicast
;GLOP
;Unicast-prefix-based
;Administratively scoped

Notable IPv4 multicast addresses

The following table is a list of notable well-known IPv4 addresses that are reserved for IP multicasting and that are registered with the Internet Assigned Numbers Authority.
IP multicast addressDescriptionRoutable
224.0.0.0Base address
224.0.0.1The All Hosts multicast group addresses all hosts on the same network segment.
224.0.0.2The All Routers multicast group addresses all routers on the same network segment.
224.0.0.4This address is used in the Distance Vector Multicast Routing Protocol to address multicast routers.
224.0.0.5The Open Shortest Path First All OSPF Routers address is used to send Hello packets to all OSPF routers on a network segment.
224.0.0.6The OSPF All Designated Routers """" address is used to send OSPF routing information to designated routers on a network segment.
224.0.0.9The Routing Information Protocol version 2 group address is used to send routing information to all RIP2-aware routers on a network segment.
224.0.0.10The Enhanced Interior Gateway Routing Protocol group address is used to send routing information to all EIGRP routers on a network segment.
224.0.0.13Protocol Independent Multicast Version 2
224.0.0.18Virtual Router Redundancy Protocol
224.0.0.19–21IS-IS over IP
224.0.0.22Internet Group Management Protocol version 3
224.0.0.102Hot Standby Router Protocol version 2 / Gateway Load Balancing Protocol
224.0.0.107Precision Time Protocol version 2 peer delay measurement messaging
224.0.0.251Multicast DNS address
224.0.0.252Link-local Multicast Name Resolution address
224.0.0.253Teredo tunneling client discovery address
224.0.1.1Network Time Protocol clients listen on this address for protocol messages when operating in multicast mode.
224.0.1.22Service Location Protocol version 1 general
224.0.1.35Service Location Protocol version 1 directory agent
224.0.1.39The Cisco multicast router AUTO-RP-ANNOUNCE address is used by RP mapping agents to listen for candidate announcements.
224.0.1.40The Cisco multicast router AUTO-RP-DISCOVERY address is the destination address for messages from the RP mapping agent to discover candidates.
224.0.1.41H.323 Gatekeeper discovery address
224.0.1.129–132Precision Time Protocol version 1 messages except peer delay measurement
224.0.1.129Precision Time Protocol version 2 messages except peer delay measurement
239.255.255.250Simple Service Discovery Protocol address
239.255.255.253Service Location Protocol version 2 address

IPv6

Multicast addresses in IPv6 use the prefix. IPv6 multicast addresses can be structured using the old format or the new format.
Bits844112
Fieldprefixflagsscopegroup ID

The prefix holds the value for all multicast addresses.
Currently, 3 of the 4 flag bits in the flags field are defined; the most-significant flag bit is reserved for future use. The other three flags are known as R, P and T.
BitFlag01
0 Reserved
1R Rendezvous point not embeddedRendezvous point embedded
2P Without prefix informationAddress based on network prefix
3 T Well-known multicast addressDynamically assigned multicast address

Similar to a unicast address, the prefix of an IPv6 multicast address specifies its scope, however, the set of possible scopes for a multicast address is different. The 4-bit sc field is used to indicate where the address is valid and unique.
IPv6 addressIPv4 equivalentScopePurpose
ff00::/16, ff0f::/16Reserved-
ffx1::/16127.0.0.0/8Interface-localPackets with this destination address may not be sent over any network link, but must remain within the current node; this is the multicast equivalent of the unicast loopback address.
ffx2::/16224.0.0.0/24Link-localPackets with this destination address may not be routed anywhere.
ffx3::/16239.255.0.0/16IPv4 local scope-
ffx4::/16Admin-localThe smallest scope that must be administratively configured.
ffx5::/16Site-localRestricted to the local physical network.
ffx8::/16239.192.0.0/14Organization-localRestricted to networks used by the organization administering the local network.
ffxe::/16224.0.1.0-238.255.255.255Global scopeEligible to be routed over the public internet.

The service is identified in the group ID field. For example, if refers to all Network Time Protocol servers on the local network segment, then refers to all NTP servers in an organization's networks. The group ID field may be further divided for special multicast address types.

Notable IPv6 multicast addresses

The following table is a list notable IPv6 multicast addresses that are registered with IANA.
AddressDescription
ff02::1All nodes on the local network segment-
ff02::2All routers on the local network segment-
ff02::5OSPFv3 All SPF routers-
ff02::6OSPFv3 All DR routers-
ff02::8IS-IS for IPv6 routers-
ff02::9RIP routers-
ff02::aEIGRP routers-
ff02::dPIM routers-
ff02::16MLDv2 reports -
ff02::1:2All DHCPv6 servers and relay agents on the local network segment -
ff02::1:3All LLMNR hosts on the local network segment -
ff05::1:3All DHCP servers on the local network site -
ff0x::cSimple Service Discovery Protocol-
ff0x::fbMulticast DNS-
ff0x::101Network Time Protocol-
ff0x::108Network Information Service-
ff0x::181Precision Time Protocol version 2 messages except peer delay measurement-
ff02::6bPrecision Time Protocol version 2 peer delay measurement messages-
ff0x::114Used for experiments-

Ethernet

Ethernet frames with a value of 1 in the least-significant bit of the first octet of the destination MAC address are treated as multicast frames and are flooded to all points on the network. While frames with ones in all bits of the destination address are sometimes referred to as broadcasts, Ethernet generally does not distinguish between multicast and broadcast frames. Modern Ethernet controllers filter received packets to reduce CPU load, by looking up the hash of a multicast destination address in a table, initialized by software, which controls whether a multicast packet is dropped or fully received.
The IEEE has allocated the address block to for group addresses for use by standard protocols. Of these, the MAC group addresses in the range of to are not forwarded by 802.1D-conformant MAC bridges.
Ethernet multicast addressEthertypeUsage
Cisco Discovery Protocol, VLAN Trunking Protocol, Unidirectional_Link_Detection
Cisco Shared Spanning Tree Protocol Address
Spanning Tree Protocol IEEE 802.1D
, or 0x88CCLink Layer Discovery Protocol
0x0802Spanning Tree Protocol IEEE 802.1ad
0x8808Ethernet flow control IEEE 802.3x
0x8809"Slow protocols" including Ethernet OAM Protocol and Link Aggregation Control Protocol
0x88f5GARP VLAN Registration Protocol
through 0x8902Ethernet CFM Protocol IEEE 802.1ag
through 0x0800IPv4 Multicast, insert the low 23 bits of the multicast IPv4 address into the Ethernet address
through 0x86DDIPv6 Multicast, insert the low 32 Bits of the multicast IPv6 Address into the Ethernet Address
through 0x88B8IEC 61850-8-1 GOOSE Type 1/1A
through 0x88B9GSSE
through 0x88BAMulticast sampled values
or 0x88F7Precision Time Protocol version 2 over Ethernet

802.11

wireless networks use the same MAC addresses for multicast as Ethernet.