Address Resolution Protocol

Sending IP packets on a multiaccess network requires mapping from an IP address to a MAC address (the physical or hardware address).

In an Ethernet environment, Address Resolution Protocol (ARP) is used to map a MAC address to an IP address. ARP dynamically binds the IP address (the logical address) to the correct MAC address. Before IP unicast packets can be sent, ARP discovers the MAC address used by the Ethernet interface where the IP address is configured.

Hosts that use ARP maintain a cache of discovered Internet-to-Ethernet address mappings to minimize the number of ARP broadcast messages. To keep the cache from growing too large, an entry is removed if it is not used within a certain period of time. Before sending a packet, the host searches its cache for Internet-to-Ethernet address mapping. If the mapping is not found, the host sends an ARP request.

Note: For information about MAC address validation, see MAC Address Validation.

How ARP Works

Figure 8 and Figure 9 show how ARP works where host 1 sends an IP packet to host 2 on a different subnet. To complete this transmission, host 1 needs the MAC address of router 1, to be used as the forwarding gateway.

A typical scenario is:

  1. Host 1 broadcasts an ARP request to all devices on subnet 1, composed by a query with the IP address of router 1. The IP address of router 1 is needed because host 2 is on a different subnet.
  2. All devices on subnet 1 compare their IP address with the enclosed IP address sent by host 1.
  3. Having the matching IP address, router 1 sends an ARP response, which includes its MAC address, to host 1.

    Figure 8: Sample ARP Process—1 through 3

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  4. Host 1 transmits the IP packet to layer 3 DA (host 2) using router 1’s MAC address.
  5. Router 1 forwards IP packet to host 2. Router 1 might send an ARP request to identify the MAC of host 2. (See Figure 9.)

    Figure 9: Sample ARP Process—4 and 5

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ARP forces all receiving hosts to compare their IP addresses with the IP address of the ARP request. So if host 1 sends another IP packet to host 2, host 1 searches its ARP table for the router 1 MAC address.

If the default router/gateway becomes unavailable, then all the routing/packet forwarding to remote destinations ceases. Usually, manual intervention is required to restore connectivity, even though alternative paths may be available. Alternatively, Virtual Router Redundancy Protocol (VRRP) may be used to prevent loss of connectivity. See JunosE IP Services Configuration Guide.

arp

arp spoof-check

arp timeout

clear arp

ip proxy-arp

MAC Address Validation

MAC address validation is a verification process performed on each incoming packet to prevent spoofing on IP Ethernet-based interfaces, including bridged Ethernet interfaces. When an incoming packet arrives on a layer 2 interface, the validation table is used to compare the packet’s source IP address with its MAC address. If the MAC address and IP address match, the packet is forwarded; if it does not match, the packet is dropped.

Note: MAC address validation for bridged Ethernet interfaces is supported only on OC12 ATM line modules on ERX routers and on OC3/OC12 ATM IOAs on the E120 and E320 routers.

MAC address validation on the E Series router can be accomplished in two ways:

The arp validate command adds the IP-MAC address pair to the validation table maintained on the physical interface.

If the validation is added statically via the CLI, the IP address–MAC address pairs are stored in NVS. The entries are used for MAC validation only if MAC validation is enabled on the interface via the ip mac-validate command.

Caution: When you configure an interface using the arp validate command, you cannot overwrite the ARP values that were added by DHCP.

You can enable or disable MAC address validation on a per interface basis by issuing the ip mac-validate command. See JunosE Physical Layer Configuration Guide or JunosE Link Layer Configuration Guide for information.

A dynamic IP subscriber interface inherits the MAC address validation state (enabled or disabled) configured for its parent static primary IP interface. See Configuring Subscriber Interfaces in the JunosE Broadband Access Configuration Guide for information.

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