<tr><td><tt>ff00::/8</tt></td> <td>Multicast</td> <td>RFC4291</td> <td></td></tr>
<tr><td><tt>ff00::/12</tt></td> <td>Globally allocated multicast</td> <td>RFC4291</td> <td></td></tr>
<tr><td><tt>ff10::/12</tt></td> <td>Locally allocated multicast</td> <td>RFC4291</td> <td></td></tr>
- <tr><td><tt>ff30::/12</tt></td> <td>Unicast prefic based multicast</td> <td>RFC3306</td> <td></td></tr>
+ <tr><td><tt>ff30::/12</tt></td> <td>Unicast prefix based multicast</td> <td>RFC3306</td> <td></td></tr>
<tr><td><tt>ff70::/12</tt></td> <td>Multicast address with embedded RP</td> <td>RFC3956</td> <td></td></tr>
</table>
\endhtmlonly
///< Convert string to address
/**< This member will try to convert the given string into
an IP address. from_string() supports all standard IP
- literal representations as well es hostnames.
+ literal representations as well as hostnames.
\attention This call may block if \a s represents a
hostname which must be looked up via some network
protocol like DNS or NIS
\throws AddressSyntaxException if the address cannot be
converted for some reason
+ \throws UnknownHostnameException if the hostname cannot
+ be resolved
\param[in] s Address literal or hostname
\param[in] resolve If this is set to \c ResolveINet4,
the call will additionally try to interpret \a s as
/**< This will construct a link local address of the form
<tt>fe80::xxxx:xxxx:xxxx:xxxx</tt>. */
- in6_addr toin6_addr() const; ///< get the linux in6_addr struct (convinience only)
+ in6_addr toin6_addr() const; ///< get the linux in6_addr struct (convenience only)
///@}
///////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////