- All Implemented Interfaces:
NodeIdentifierStrategy
public final class MacNodeIdentifierStrategy
extends Object
implements NodeIdentifierStrategy
Strategy that provides the current machine address (MAC), if available.
If no MAC is found, a random node identifier is returned.
It looks for the first MAC that can be found. First it tries to find the MAC
that is associated with the host name. Otherwise, it tries to find the first
MAC that is up and running. This second try may be very expensive on Windows,
because it iterates over a lot of virtual network interfaces created by the
operating system.
### RFC-4122 - 4.1.6. Node
For UUID version 1, the node field consists of an IEEE 802 MAC address,
usually the host address. For systems with multiple IEEE 802 addresses, any
available one can be used. The lowest addressed octet (octet number 10)
contains the global/local bit and the unicast/multicast bit, and is the first
octet of the address transmitted on an 802.3 LAN.
For systems with no IEEE address, a randomly or pseudo-randomly generated
value may be used; see Section 4.5. The multicast bit must be set in such
addresses, in order that they will never conflict with addresses obtained
from network cards.