1.  I think ARP is effectively a ping for a mac.  It verifies connectivity on 
level 2 between two hosts.  You have to be on the same segment though....

To make it work, you would have to know the mac address of the remote host, 
clear the  arp table the local host, then send the ARP request out.

This would still require that each host have IP stacks in place with 
functioning IP addresses.  Although ARP acts under IP, it still requires IP to 
function.

2.  I think you might be able to fudge it using RARP, if you just look for 
signals sent to that address. 

3.  A kind of constant ping might be... if you knew the remote's MAC address 
you could poison the ARP table with an announcement, spoof the MAC locally, 
then do MITM stuff and relay communications.

4.  Ok, after all that craziness I did a google search and found ARPING:  
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arping

ARPING still seems to rely upon a proper IP stack and address on both hosts.

Meh, your best bet might be just to scan your arp tables for the mac you are 
interested in.  I think all NICs broadcast periodically saying "I am here".  
Passive ping.
--p

-----Original Message-----
From: Howard C. Berkowitz [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Monday, August 18, 2008 3:42 PM
To: nanog@nanog.org
Subject: RE: SLAAC(autoconfig) vs DHCPv6


This was especially a question when L2 was "in" and routing was out: how do
you ping a MAC address?

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