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I'm trying to figure out how to do the equivalent of an IPV4 broadcast using IPV6.

I'm creating a non-blocking IPV6 UDP socket.

From the side broadcasting i'm literally just doing a sendto "FF02::1" on port 12346.

On the listen side I discovered I need to join the group so I did the following:

    ipv6_mreq membership;
    memset( &membership.ipv6mr_multiaddr, 0, sizeof( in6_addr ) );
    membership.ipv6mr_multiaddr.u.Word[0]   = htons( 0xff02 );
    membership.ipv6mr_multiaddr.u.Word[7]   = htons( 0x0001 );
    membership.ipv6mr_interface             = 0;

    if( enable )
    {
        if ( 0 != setsockopt( m_Socket, SOL_SOCKET, IPV6_JOIN_GROUP, (char*)&membership, sizeof( ipv6_mreq ) ) )
        {
            DisplayError();
            return false;
        }
    }

However setsockopt always returns "WSAENOPROTOOPT". Why? Can anyone help me on this one? I'm at a complete loss.

Edit: I change the level to "IPPROTO_IPV6" but now I get a "WSAEINVAL".

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  • @bdonlan: Cheers. Was gonan do that myself but forgot :)
    – Goz
    Jun 21, 2010 at 17:48

2 Answers 2

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The interface must be set for locally scoped IPv6 because the addresses are only unique to the interface. In simpler terms the address fe80::1 can belong to both eth0 and eth1 but are completely separate.

So this means you need to explicitly send a multicast packet on every up interface that supports multicast, or provide the user with a means of specifying a particular interface.

(edit) If it helps you can check out multicast code here,

http://code.google.com/p/openpgm/source/browse/trunk/openpgm/pgm/

6
  • So ar eyou saying I need to bind to address fe80::1 / random port before doing the IPV6_JOIN_GROUP?
    – Goz
    Jun 27, 2010 at 7:03
  • Run through the output of GetAdapterAddresses() and for each unique interface index with an IPv6 address call IPV6_JOIN_GROUP.
    – Steve-o
    Jun 28, 2010 at 3:46
  • Actually I bound BEFORE joining the group and the join went through fine ... Thats perfect :)
    – Goz
    Jun 28, 2010 at 8:16
  • Hopefully bdonlan will award you the bounty because this is the more helpful response in my opinion :)
    – Goz
    Jun 28, 2010 at 8:16
  • 1
    @bdonlan: Nah alas the retarded rule changes for bounties means you needed to explicitly select it unless Steve-o got 2 up-votes for his answer :(
    – Goz
    Jun 29, 2010 at 11:15
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I think the problem is that you are leaving the ipv6mr_interface value at zero, which isn't good enough if you want to use a link-scope multicast address like ff02::1. You need to set the ipv6mr_interface value to the number corresponding with the local network interface you want the packets to be sent/received on. (You can find out what interface indices are available on the current computer by calling getaddrinfo() and reading the sin6_addr.s6_addr values out of the (struct sockaddr_in6 *)'s that it hands to you)

(If at this point you are thinking to yourself, wouldn't it be so much easier if interface zero acted as an "all interfaces" setting... yes, it would be. Alas, IPv6 doesn't do that for some reason :( )

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  • Alas under windows I saw that the zone index was 5 for my main adapter. So I tried that index. I also 1 and still had no luck ... Is the interface index the same as the zone index?
    – Goz
    Jun 21, 2010 at 21:31
  • I'm 99% sure that zone index and interface index are the same thing; so it might be that something else is the problem as well. Under Windows you can call GetAdaptersAddresses() to get to the Ipv6IfIndex field of each adapter's PIP_ADAPTER_ADDRESSES struct. GetAdaptersAddresses() is even more fun than Posix's getaddrinfo() function... check out lines 1034-1124 (and particularly line 1097) of the following file to see my usage of that function: www.lcscanada.com/muscle/muscle/util/NetworkUtilityFunctions.cpp Jun 21, 2010 at 22:40
  • Thats not the problem then. There must be something i'm missing. The zone index DOES correspond to the ifindex. In fact just to test my sanity I just tried, in a loop, every zone index from 1 to 50 and I still get a "WSAEINVAL".
    – Goz
    Jun 22, 2010 at 8:32
  • Ah, and one more thing: under Windows, you must bind() the socket to a port BEFORE adding it to the multicast group. (That requirement seems to be a Windows-specific thing; Linux and MacOS/X don't care about the ordering between the bind and the group-join) Jun 22, 2010 at 15:30
  • @Jeremy: I know on the IPPROTO_IPV6 ... early mistake. And I DO bind it to a port before trying to add to a multicast group. I get the same error from Mac OSX and the iPhone if that makes any difference to ya!
    – Goz
    Jun 23, 2010 at 11:34

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