Pim6 sm traffic snooping overview, Application examples of pim6 sm traffic snooping, Snooping-enabled vlan – Brocade FastIron Ethernet Switch IP Multicast Configuration Guide User Manual

Page 64: Enabled vlan

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Disabling the flooding of unregistered IPv6 multicast frames in an
MLD-snooping-enabled VLAN

NOTE
Disabling the flooding of unregistered IPv6 multicast frames in an MLD-snooping-enabled VLAN is
supported only on ICX 6650 devices.

To disable the flooding of unregistered IPv6 multicast frames in an MLD-snooping-enabled VLAN,
use the ipv6 multicast disable-flooding command in global configuration mode.

The following example shows the disabling of flooding of unregistered IPv6
multicast frames.

Brocade(config)# ipv6 multicast disable-flooding

PIM6 SM traffic snooping overview

When multiple PIM sparse routers connect through a snooping-enabled device, the Brocade device
always forwards multicast traffic to these routers. For example, PIM sparse routers R1, R2, and R3
connect through a device. Assume R2 needs traffic, and R1 sends it to the device, which forwards it to
both R2 and R3, even though R3 does not need it. A PIM6 SM snooping-enabled device listens to join
and prune messages exchanged by PIM sparse routers, and stops traffic to the router that sends
prune messages. This allows the device to forward the data stream to R2 only.

PIM6 SM traffic snooping requires MLD snooping to be enabled on the device. MLD snooping
configures the device to listen for MLD messages. PIM6 SM traffic snooping provides a finer level of
multicast traffic control by configuring the device to listen specifically for PIM6 SM join and prune
messages sent from one PIM6 SM router to another through the device.

Application examples of PIM6 SM traffic snooping

Figure 2

shows an example application of the PIM6 SM traffic snooping feature. In this example, a

device is connected through an IP router to a PIM6 SM group source that is sending traffic for two
PIM6 SM groups. The device also is connected to a receiver for each of the groups.

When PIM6 SM traffic snooping is enabled, the device starts listening for PIM6 SM join and prune
messages and MLD group membership reports. Until the device receives a PIM6 SM join message or
an MLD group membership report, the device forwards IP multicast traffic out all ports. Once the
device receives a join message or group membership report for a group, the device forwards
subsequent traffic for that group only on the ports from which the join messages or MLD reports were
received.

In this example, the router connected to the receiver for group ff1e::1:2 sends a join message toward
the group source. Because PIM6 SM traffic snooping is enabled on the device, the device examines
the join message to learn the group ID, then makes a forwarding entry for the group ID and the port
connected to the receiver router. The next time the device receives traffic for ff1e::1:2 from the group
source, the device forwards the traffic only on port 5/1, because that is the only port connected to a
receiver for the group.

Disabling the flooding of unregistered IPv6 multicast frames in an MLD-snooping-enabled VLAN

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FastIron Ethernet Switch IP Multicast Configuration Guide

53-1003085-02

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