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[h=2]Link-local addresses and zone indicesURL="http://www.techexams.net/w/index.php?title=IPv6_address&action=edit§ion=34"]edit[/URL[/h]Because all link-local addresses in a host have a common prefix, normal routing procedures cannot be used to choose the outgoing interface when sending packets to a link-local destination. A special identifier, known as a zone index,[7] is needed to provide the additional routing information; in the case of link-local addresses, zone indices correspond to interface identifiers. When an address is written textually, the zone index is appended to the address, separated by a percent sign (%). The actual syntax of zone indices depends on the operating system: the Microsoft Windows IPv6 stack uses numeric zone indexes, e.g., fe80::3%1. The index is determined by the interface number; most Unix-like systems (e.g., BSD, Linux, Mac OS X) use the interface name as a zone index: fe80::3%eth0. Zone index notations cause syntax conflicts when used in uniform resource identifiers (URI), so the '%' character must be escaped via percent-encoding[35]: http://[fe80::3%25eth0]
yeh same no mention of it in the book think im gonna have a dig round amazon for some concrete material thanks for the link
NetworkVeteran wrote: » Still, an interesting observation backed up by RFC 4007! Thanks for sharing.
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