On Fri, 2013-01-11 at 16:13 +0100, Paweł Brodacki wrote:
> 2013/1/9 Alan Cox <a...@lxorguk.ukuu.org.uk>:
> > 
> > They are supposed to be unique *per machine* - you can have two nics on
> > the same machine with the same MAC although this is rare.
> >
> > Alan
> 
> Alan, please, verify information before dissemination.
> MAC address assigned to a physical NIC ought to be globally unique.
> Ethernet frames are sent to MAC address, so two identical addresses
> present in any broadcast domain would awfully confuse network
> switches. See e.g. Wikipedia article on MAC
> https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/MAC_address. Hardware producers reserve
> prefixes (first 3 bytes of the address) and are responsible for not
> manufacturing devices with identical suffixes (last 3 bytes of the
> address).


>  This should result in globally unique MAC addresses, however
> I did encounter NICs with identical ones (cheap stuff of unknown and
> dubious provenance).

You try to call out Alan, THEN your last sentence above, states exactly
what Alan said, they *can* have identical in the same machine *BUT
RARE*.  And you just stated you encountered it once?  Sounds like what
he stated to me.


-- 
Mike Chambers
Madisonville, KY

"Best little town on Earth!"

-- 
users mailing list
users@lists.fedoraproject.org
To unsubscribe or change subscription options:
https://admin.fedoraproject.org/mailman/listinfo/users
Guidelines: http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Mailing_list_guidelines
Have a question? Ask away: http://ask.fedoraproject.org

Reply via email to