bionic (8) ndisc6.8.gz

Provided by: ndisc6_1.0.3-3ubuntu2_amd64 bug

NAME

       ndisc6 - ICMPv6 Neighbor Discovery tool

SYNOPSIS

       ndisc6 [-1mnqv] [-r attempts] [-s source_ip] [-w wait_ms] <IPv6 address> <iface>

DESCRIPTON

       NDisc6 is an Unix program which implements the ICMPv6 Neighbor Discovery in userland (it is normally done
       by the kernel). It is used to lookup the link-layer  address  (layer  2  address,  MAC  in  the  case  of
       Ethernet) of any on-link IPv6 node.

       The  IPv6  address of the node must be specified, as well as the networking interface on which to perform
       the lookup.

OPTIONS

       -1 or --single
              Exit as soon as the first advertisement is received (default).

       -h or --help
              Display some help and exit.

       -m or --multiple
              Wait for possible duplicate advertisements and print all of them.

       -n or --numeric
              If the first parameter is not a valid IPv6 address, do not try to resolve it as a DNS hostname.

       -q or --quiet
              Only display link-layer address. Display nothing in case of failure.  That is mostly  useful  when
              calling the program from a shell script.

       -r attempts or --retry attempts
              Send  ICMPv6  Neighbor  Discovery that many times until a reply is received, or abort. By default,
              ndisc6 will try 3  times  before  aborting  (MAX_MULTICAST_SOLICIT  and  MAX_UNICAST_SOLICIT  from
              RFC2461).

       -s source_ip or --source source_ip
              Specify the IPv6 address to be used as the source for the neighbor solicitation packets.

       -V or --version
              Display program version and license and exit.

       -v or --verbose
              Display verbose information. That is the default.

       -w wait_ms or --wait wait_ms
              Wait  wait_ms  milliseconds  for  a  response  before retrying.  By default, ndisc6 waits 1 second
              between each attempts (RETRANS_TIMER from RFC2461).

       If ndisc6 does not receive any response after the  specified  number  of  attempts  waiting  for  wait_ms
       milliseconds  each  time,  it  will exit with code 2. On error, it exits with code 1.  Otherwise it exits
       with code 0. This makes it possible to use the exit code to see if a host is on-link or not.

DIAGNOSTICS

       If you get no response while you know the remote host is up, it is most likely that it  is  not  on-link,
       that  is  to  say,  you  must  cross one or more routers to reach it. By design, IPv6 nodes ignore ICMPv6
       Neighbor Discovery packets received from nodes not on the same link (i.e. Ethernet segment), for the sake
       of security. Technically, that is done by ensuring that the Hop limit (TTL) is 255.

       Note that you cannot use ndisc6 to lookup the local host's link-layer address.

SECURITY

       ndisc6  should  be  setuid  root  to  allow use by non-privileged users. It will drop its root privileges
       before any attempt is made to send or receive data from the network to reduce the possible  impact  of  a
       security vulnerability.

SEE ALSO

       ping6(8), rdisc6(8), ipv6(7)

AUTHOR

       Rémi Denis-Courmont <remi at remlab dot net>

       http://www.remlab.net/ndisc6/