5

I would like to understand how to convert a MAC adress to IPv6. For example: 00:01:04:76:2A:5C Should become FE80::0201:04FF:FE76:2A5C

Could someone elaborate the conversion please ? We suppose an automatic configuration without random parameter for a local machin.

1

8 Answers 8

23

Conversion step by step from a MAC address (48 bits) to a IPv6 address (128 bits):

  1. take the mac address: 52:74:f2:b1:a8:7f
  2. throw ff:fe in the middle: 52:74:f2:ff:fe:b1:a8:7f
  3. reformat to IPv6 notation 5274:f2ff:feb1:a87f
  4. convert the first octet from hexadecimal to binary: 52 -> 01010010
  5. invert the bit at index 6 (counting from 0): 01010010 -> 01010000
  6. convert octet back to hexadecimal: 01010000 -> 50
  7. replace first octet with newly calculated one: 5074:f2ff:feb1:a87f
  8. prepend the link-local prefix: fe80::5074:f2ff:feb1:a87f
1
5

Bash/zsh function (now working without bc):

format_eui_64() {
    local macaddr="$1"
    printf "%02x%s" $(( 16#${macaddr:0:2} ^ 2#00000010 )) "${macaddr:2}" \
        | sed -E -e 's/([0-9a-zA-Z]{2})*/0x\0|/g' \
        | tr -d ':\n' \
        | xargs -d '|' \
        printf "%02x%02x:%02xff:fe%02x:%02x%02x"
}
2
  • Can you post the output of 'bc -v'? I get the correct result on my system and could not reproduce your finding yet.
    – cortex
    Feb 25, 2018 at 14:11
  • Oh, I see! The problem was that I've been using zsh and not bash in all test cases and I wasn't aware that bash interprets any leading zero in an arithmetic expression as an octal value. For example let "i = 010"; echo $i in bash returns 8 while the same expression in zsh returns 10.
    – cortex
    Mar 9, 2018 at 20:13
1

I got it working in C. Suggestions are welcome.

#include <stdio.h>
#include <string.h>

int toogle_kth_bit(unsigned int n, int k) { 
    return (n ^ (1 << (k-1))); 
}

/*
- take the mac address: 52:74:f2:b1:a8:7f
- throw ff:fe in the middle: 52:74:f2:ff:fe:b1:a8:7f
- reformat to IPv6 notation 5274:f2ff:feb1:a87f
- convert the first octet from hexadecimal to binary: 52 -> 01010010
- invert the bit at index 6 (counting from 0): 01010010 -> 01010000
- convert octet back to hexadecimal: 01010000 -> 50
- replace first octet with newly calculated one: 5074:f2ff:feb1:a87f
- prepend the link-local prefix: fe80::5074:f2ff:feb1:a87f
*/

void mac_to_ipv6_link_local(char* mac) {
    char mac_c[128];
    char mac_c_exp[128];
    char ipv6[128];
    char ipv6_link_local[128];
    char delim[] = ":";
    int count = 0;

    // throw ff:fe in the middle

    snprintf(mac_c, sizeof(mac_c), "%s", mac);
    char *ptr = strtok(mac_c, delim);

    while (ptr != NULL) {
        count++;

        if (count > 1) {
            snprintf(mac_c_exp, sizeof(mac_c_exp), "%s:%s", mac_c_exp, ptr);
        } else {
            snprintf(mac_c_exp, sizeof(mac_c_exp), "%s%s", mac_c_exp, ptr);
        }

        if (count == 3) {
            snprintf(mac_c_exp, sizeof(mac_c_exp), "%s:%s", mac_c_exp, "ff:fe");
        }

        ptr = strtok(NULL, delim);
    }

    // reformat to IPv6 notation

    ptr = strtok(mac_c_exp, delim);
    count = 0;

    while (ptr != NULL) {
        count++;

        if (count % 2 != 0 && count > 1) {
            snprintf(ipv6, sizeof(ipv6), "%s:%s", ipv6, ptr);
        } else {
            snprintf(ipv6, sizeof(ipv6), "%s%s", ipv6, ptr);
        }

        ptr = strtok(NULL, delim);
    }

    // convert the first octet from hexadecimal to binary

    char hex[2] = {ipv6[0], ipv6[1]};
    char inverted_hex[3];
    unsigned int number = (unsigned int)strtol(hex, NULL, 16);

    // invert the bit at index 6 (counting from 0)

    unsigned int new_num = toogle_kth_bit(number, 2);
    sprintf(inverted_hex, "%x", new_num);

    // replace first octet with newly calculated one

    ipv6[0] = inverted_hex[0];
    ipv6[1] = inverted_hex[1];

    // prepend the link-local prefix

    sprintf(ipv6_link_local, "%s%s", "fe80::", ipv6);
    printf("%s\n", ipv6_link_local);
}

int main() {
   mac_to_ipv6_link_local("52:74:f2:b1:a8:7f");
   return 0;
}
1

My C# solution or the conversion:

using System;
using System.Text.RegularExpressions;

namespace mac2ipv6
{
    class Program
    {
        static string mac = "52:74:f2:b1:a8:f7";
        static void Main(string[] args)
        {
            // Remove ':' and '-' from input mac
            string bare_mac = Regex.Replace(mac, "[:-]", String.Empty);

            // Insert fffe in the middle
            bare_mac = bare_mac.Insert(6, "fffe");

            // XOR first octet with 00000010
            int first_octet = Convert.ToInt32(bare_mac.Substring(0, 2), 16);
            int mask = 2;
            int new_first_octet= first_octet ^ mask;
            string new_first_octet_hex = new_first_octet.ToString("X");

            // Replace first octet
            bare_mac = new_first_octet_hex + bare_mac.Substring(2);

            // Prepend link local prefix and format ipv6
            string ipv6 = ("fe80::" + Regex.Replace(bare_mac, ".{4}", "${0}:")).TrimEnd(':');

            Console.WriteLine(ipv6);
            Console.ReadKey();
        }
    }
}
2
1

Excel Formula:

=CONCAT("fe80::",LOWER(DEC2HEX(BITXOR(HEX2DEC(LEFT(A1,2)),2),2)),MID(A1,4,5),"ff:fe",MID(A1,10,5),RIGHT(A1,2))
0

Here is the solution on Golang:

func mac2ip(s string) (net.IP, error) {
    mac, err := net.ParseMAC(s)
    if err != nil {
        return nil, err
    }

    // Invert the bit at the index 6 (counting from 0)
    mac[0] ^= (1 << (2 - 1))

    ip := []byte{
        0xfe, 0x80, 0x0, 0x0, 0x0, 0x0, 0x0, 0x0, // prepend with fe80::
        mac[0], mac[1], mac[2], 0xff, 0xfe, mac[3], mac[4], mac[5], // insert ff:fe in the middle
    }

    return ip, nil
}

Full version: https://gist.github.com/0xef53/cb1c5d7594683982ba41d303ac03e9a0

0

Fix for MAC adresses starting with "00" string new_first_octet_hex = new_first_octet.ToString("X2");

1
  • This question was not about any particular programming language, thus you cannot respond with any code that does it. You can look at the tags which and if they use programming to do so
    – Timberman
    Jan 11, 2022 at 20:03
0

Excel formula in German for MAC address in cell "A1":

=KLEIN(VERKETTEN("fe80::",KLEIN(DEZINHEX(BITXODER(HEXINDEZ(LINKS(A1,2)),2),2)),TEIL(A1,4,5),"ff:fe",TEIL(A1,10,5),RECHTS(A1,2)))

I added "KLEIN" ("LOWER" in German) in front as the original formula mentioned above didn't convert the whole string to lower letters for me.

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.