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0.0.0.0 & 127.0.0.1 & Localhost

0.0.0.0 & 127.0.0.1 & Localhost

作者: 水雨田 | 来源:发表于2018-11-06 23:04 被阅读0次

    0.0.0.0

    In the Internet Protocol Version 4, the address 0.0.0.0 is a non-routable meta-address used to designate an invalid, unknown or non-applicable target. This address is assigned specific meanings in a number of contexts.

    在IPv4中,地址0.0.0.0是一个不可路由的(non-routable)元地址(meta-address),它用于指定无效,未知或不适用的目标。这个地址在不同的上下文中被赋予了特殊的意义。

    As a host address

    Uses includes:

    • A way to specify any IPv4 address at all. It is used in this way when configuring servers (i.e. when binding listening sockets). This is known to TCP programmers as INADDR_ANY. (bind(2) binds to addresses, not interfaces.)
    • The address a host claims as its own when it has not yet been assigned an address. Such as when sending the initial DHCPDISCOVER packet when using DHCP.
    • The address a host assigns to itself when address request via DHCP has failed, provided the host's IP stack supports this. This usage has been replaced with the APIPA mechanism in modern operating systems.
    • A way to explicitly specify that the target is unavailable.

    In the context of servers, 0.0.0.0 can mean all IPv4 addresses on the local machine. If a host has two IP addresses, 192.168.1.1 and 10.1.2.1, and a server running on the host is configured to listen on 0.0.0.0, it will be reachable at both of those IP addresses.

    As a default route

    In the context of routing, 0.0.0.0 is usually used with a network mask of zero as the network address of the default route. This will often be expressed as 0.0.0.0/0 or 0.0.0.0 0.0.0.0.

    This matches all addresses in the IPv4 address space and is present on most hosts, directed towards a local router.

    In IPv6

    In IPv6, the all-zeros address is typically represented by ::.

    Localhost & 127.0.0.1

    In computer networking, localhost is a hostname that means this computer. It is used to access the network services that are running on the host via the loopback network interface. Using the loopback interface bypasses any local network interface hardware.

    Loopback

    The local loopback mechanism may be used to run a network service on a host without requiring a physical network interface, or without making the service accessible from the networks the computer may be connected to. For example, a locally installed website may be accessed from a web browser by the URL http://localhost to display its home page.

    The name localhost normally resolves to the IPv4 loopback address 127.0.0.1, and to the IPv6 loopback address ::1.

    Name resolution

    IPv4 network standards reserve the entire 127.0.0.0/8 address block (total: more than 16 million addresses) for loopback purposes. That means any packet sent to any of those addresses (127.0.0.1 through 127.255.255.255) is looped back. The address 127.0.0.1 is the standard address normally used for IPv4 loopback traffic; the rest are not supported on all operating systems (and most people don't know of their existence). However, they can be used to set up multiple servers on the local machine, all listening on the same port. The IPv6 standard assigns only a single address for loopback: ::1.

    The resolution of the name localhost to one or more IP addresses is normally configured by the following lines in the operating system's hosts file:

    127.0.0.1    localhost
    ::1          localhost
    

    The name may also be resolved by Domain Name System (DNS) servers, but queries for this name should be resolved locally, and should not be forwarded to remote name servers.

    In addition to the mapping of localhost to the loopback addresses (127.0.0.1 and ::1), localhost may also be mapped to other IPv4 (loopback) addresses and it is also possible to assign other, or additional, names to any loopback address. The mapping of localhost to addresses other than the designated loopback address range in the hosts file or in DNS is not guaranteed to have the desired effect, as applications may map the name internally.

    In the Domain Name System, the name localhost is reserved as a top-level domain name, originally set aside to avoid confusion with the hostname used for loopback purposes. IETF standards prohibit domain name registrars from assigning the name localhost.

    IETF standards

    The name localhost is reserved for loopback purposes by RFC 6761 (Special-Use Domain Names),[3] which achieved the Proposed Standard maturity level in February 2013. The standard sets forth a number of special considerations governing the use of the name in the Domain Name System:

    • An IPv4 or IPv6 address query for the name localhost must always resolve to the respective loopback address, which is specified in a separate standard.
    • Applications may resolve the name to a loopback address themselves, or pass it to the local name resolver mechanisms.
    • When a name resolver receives an address (A or AAAA) query for localhost, it should return the appropriate loopback addresses and negative responses for any other requested record types. Queries for localhost should not be sent to caching name servers.
    • To avoid burdening the Domain Name System root servers with traffic, caching name servers should never request name server records for localhost, or forward resolution to authoritative name servers.
    • DNS registrars are precluded from delegating domain names in the top-level domain localhost.
    • When authoritative name servers receive queries for 'localhost' in spite of the provisions mentioned above, they should resolve them appropriately.

    The IPv4 loopback addresses are reserved within the IPv4 address space by the IETF Special Use IPv4 Addresses standard (RFC 5735). The reservation can be traced back to the November 1986 Assigned Numbers standard (RFC 990).

    In contrast, the IETF IP Version 6 Addressing Architecture standard (RFC 4291) reserves the single IPv6 loopback address ::1 within the IPv6 address space. The standard precludes the assignment of that address to any physical interface, as well as its use as the source or destination address in any packet sent to remote hosts. Any such packet that is erroneously transmitted is not supposed to be routed and should be dropped by all routers or hosts that receive it.

    Packet processing

    The processing of any packet sent to a loopback address is implemented in the link layer of the TCP/IP stack. Such packets are never passed to any network interface controller (NIC) or hardware device driver and must not appear outside of a computing system, or be routed by any router. This permits software testing and local services in the absence of any hardware network interfaces.

    Looped-back packets are distinguished from any other packets traversing the TCP/IP stack only by the special IP address they were addressed to. Thus, the services that ultimately receive them respond according to the specified destination. For example, an HTTP service could route packets addressed to 127.0.0.99:80 and 127.0.0.100:80 to different Web servers, or to a single server that returns different web pages. To simplify such testing, the hosts file may be configured to provide appropriate names for each address.

    Packets received on a non-loopback interface with a loopback source or destination address must be dropped. Such packets are sometimes referred to as Martian packets. As with any other bogus packets, they may be malicious and any problems they might cause can be avoided by applying bogon filtering.

    Special cases

    The releases of the MySQL database differentiate between the use of the hostname localhost and the use of the addresses 127.0.0.1 and ::1. When using localhost as the destination in a client connector interface of an application, the MySQL application programming interface connects to the database using a Unix domain socket, while a TCP connection via the loopback interface requires the direct use of the explicit address.

    One notable exception to the use of the 127.0.0.0/8 network addresses is their use in Multiprotocol Label Switching (MPLS) traceroute error detection, in which their property of not being routable provides a convenient means to avoid delivery of faulty packets to end users.

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