(originally posted to wispa ipv6 list, and someone there mentioned that folks here might have some suggestions, so apologize if you are a member of both.) I am seeing issues with IPV6 multicast storms in my network that are fairly low volume (1-2mbit), but that are causing service disruptions due to CPU load on the switches and that the network is a Point to MultiPoint wireless network. I have about 500 IPV4 clients on a vlan served by Cisco ME3400, Catalyst 3750 and 3560 switches. These are switched back to a routed interface and IP addresses are assigned by DHCP. We are not using IPV6 at all, and I don't have control of the clients. What I'm seeing is IPV6 Multicast Listener requests from a single client (different clients at different times) going out on the network, the switches manage them in software, so CPU goes up (not a lot, but it seems to impact performance quite a bit), but the larger problem is that all other IPV6 clients respond to the multicast broadcast address generating a 1-2mbit storm of traffic to all ports all the time. This then transits the bandwidth constrained wireless network in a steady state, causing high collisions which causes _significant_ performance degradation in the wireless network. It would appear that this is _generally_ caused by Dell or HP workstations with buggy network interface cards in hibernate mode. http://blog.bimajority.org/2014/09/05/the-network-nightmare-that-ate-my-week... http://packetpushers.net/good-nics-bad-things-blast-ipv6-multicast-listener-... Now it looks like from my reading that CISCO MLD snooping would _help_ with this, though it would not stop the offender from generating the multicast requests, it might keep if from reaching _all_ ports, but it would still affect any ports that had _subscribed_ IPV6 clients, and it would require changing the SDM template and a reload on all the switches. So not a real answer and very painful. Right now, I'm just tracking the source down and shutting it off. Do not really want to get into an argument about switched vs routed, and am working on reducing the size of the broadcast domain now, but this is a new issue, and I need to come up with some kind of plan to resolve with my current equipment/network. Any thoughts?? Ideas? I suspect this will become more of an issue for more folks in the near future. /thanks -- Richard Holbo Southern Oregon Network Support Services richard.holbo@sonss.net - 541.890.8067 http://www.sonss.net