Ethernet address: A universally administered address is uniquely assigned to a device by its manufacturer. The first three octets (in transmission order) contain the Organizationally Unique Identifier (OUI). The following three (MAC-48 and EUI-48) octets are assigned by that organization with the only constraint of uniqueness. A locally administered address is assigned to a device by a network administrator and does not contain OUIs. See http://standards.ieee.org/regauth/groupmac/tutorial.html
- Examples
- examples/bbdev_app/main.c, examples/bond/main.c, examples/distributor/main.c, examples/dma/dmafwd.c, examples/ethtool/ethtool-app/ethapp.c, examples/ethtool/ethtool-app/main.c, examples/ethtool/lib/rte_ethtool.c, examples/eventdev_pipeline/pipeline_worker_generic.c, examples/eventdev_pipeline/pipeline_worker_tx.c, examples/flow_classify/flow_classify.c, examples/flow_filtering/main.c, examples/ip_fragmentation/main.c, examples/ip_pipeline/cli.c, examples/ip_pipeline/parser.c, examples/ip_reassembly/main.c, examples/ipsec-secgw/ipsec-secgw.c, examples/ipsec-secgw/ipsec_worker.c, examples/ipsec-secgw/parser.c, examples/ipv4_multicast/main.c, examples/l2fwd-cat/l2fwd-cat.c, examples/l2fwd-crypto/main.c, examples/l2fwd-jobstats/main.c, examples/l2fwd-keepalive/main.c, examples/l2fwd/main.c, examples/l3fwd-graph/main.c, examples/l3fwd-power/main.c, examples/l3fwd/l3fwd_event.c, examples/l3fwd/main.c, examples/link_status_interrupt/main.c, examples/multi_process/client_server_mp/mp_server/main.c, examples/packet_ordering/main.c, examples/pipeline/cli.c, examples/ptpclient/ptpclient.c, examples/rxtx_callbacks/main.c, examples/server_node_efd/server/main.c, examples/skeleton/basicfwd.c, examples/vhost/main.c, examples/vm_power_manager/channel_monitor.c, examples/vm_power_manager/guest_cli/vm_power_cli_guest.c, examples/vm_power_manager/main.c, examples/vmdq/main.c, and examples/vmdq_dcb/main.c.
Definition at line 74 of file rte_ether.h.