Web Management Guide-R04

Table Of Contents
Chapter 15
| Basic IP Functions
Address Resolution Protocol
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Figure 439: Tracing the Route to a Network Device
Address Resolution Protocol
If static routes are added to the switch, the router uses its routing tables to make
routing decisions, and uses Address Resolution Protocol (ARP) to forward traffic
from one hop to the next. ARP is used to map an IP address to a physical layer (i.e.,
MAC) address. When an IP frame is received by this router (or any standards-based
router), it first looks up the MAC address corresponding to the destination IP
address in the ARP cache. If the address is found, the router writes the MAC address
into the appropriate field in the frame header, and forwards the frame on to the
next hop. IP traffic passes along the path to its final destination in this way, with
each routing device mapping the destination IP address to the MAC address of the
next hop toward the recipient, until the packet is delivered to the final destination.
If there is no entry for an IP address in the ARP cache, the router will broadcast an
ARP request packet to all devices on the network. The ARP request contains the
following fields similar to that shown in this example:
When devices receive this request, they discard it if their address does not match
the destination IP address in the message. However, if it does match, they write
their own hardware address into the destination MAC address field and send the
message back to the source hardware address. When the source device receives a
reply, it writes the destination IP address and corresponding MAC address into its
Table 41: Address Resolution Protocol
destination IP address 10.1.0.19
destination MAC address ?
source IP address 10.1.0.253
source MAC address 00-00-ab-cd-00-00