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These MAC addresses are 48 bits or 6 bytes long, so they are also known as MAC-48 or EUI-48. EUI stands for Extended Unique Identifier. It is written in hexadecimal characters as shown below: MAC addresses act as the physical addresses for local communications.
A group MAC address allows the port to receive frames with that groups destination MAC address. You can assign a group MAC address of all zeros, but not an address of all XFF. For a nonzero group MAC address: Set bit 7 to 1 for an Ethernet LAN connection.
EUI-48 and EUI-64 may be used as universally unique MAC addresses as used in the family of IEEE 802 standards. For example, the Ethernet MAC Address is an EUI-48, unique to one particular Ethernet interface. There are other uses of the OUI however, such as its use as a company identifier in the SNAP protocol.
MAC-48 was used to address hardware interfaces within existing 802-based networking applications; EUI-48 is now used for 802-based networking and is also used to identify other devices and software, for example Bluetooth.
IEEE Std 802 provides general descriptions on use of EUI-48 and EUI-64 for universally unique MAC addresses, and use in protocol identifiers. The various IEEE 802.1 standards provide specifications for bridging among networks using EUI-48 identifiers as MAC addresses.

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A MAC address consists of 48 bits, usually represented as a string of 12 hexadecimal digits (0 to 9, a to f, or A to F); these are often grouped into pairs separated by colons or dashes. For example, the MAC address 001B638445E6 may be given as 00:1b:63:84:45:e6 or as 00-1B-63-84-45-E6.
The IPv6 EUI-64 format address is obtained through the 48-bit MAC address. The MAC address is first separated into two 24-bits, with one being OUI (Organizationally Unique Identifier) and the other being NIC specific. The 16-bit 0xFFFE is then inserted between these two 24-bits for the 64-bit EUI address.

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