Pruning a multicast tree – Brocade TurboIron 24X Series Configuration Guide User Manual

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Brocade TurboIron 24X Series Configuration Guide

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PIM Dense

Pruning a multicast tree

As multicast packets reach these leaf routers, the routers check their IGMP databases for the
group. If the group is not in a router IGMP database, the router discards the packet and sends a
prune message to the upstream router. The router that discarded the packet also maintains the
prune state for the source, group (S,G) pair. The branch is then pruned (removed) from the
multicast tree. No further multicast packets for that specific (S,G) pair will be received from that
upstream router until the prune state expires. You can configure the PIM Prune Timer (the length of
time that a prune state is considered valid).

For example, in

Figure 104

the sender with address 10.95.5.1 is sending multicast packets to the

group 229.225.0.1. If a PIM switch receives any groups other than that group, the switch discards
the group and sends a prune message to the upstream PIM switch.

In

Figure 105

, switch S5 is a leaf node with no group members in its IGMP database. Therefore, the

switch must be pruned from the multicast tree. S5 sends a prune message upstream to its
neighbor switch S4 to remove itself from the multicast delivery tree and install a prune state, as
seen in

Figure 105

. Switch S5 will not receive any further multicast traffic until the prune age

interval expires.

When a node on the multicast delivery tree has all of its downstream branches (downstream
interfaces) in the prune state, a prune message is sent upstream. In the case of S4, if both S5 and
S6 are in a prune state at the same time, S4 becomes a leaf node with no downstream interfaces
and sends a prune message to S1. With S4 in a prune state, the resulting multicast delivery tree
would consist only of leaf nodes S2 and S3.

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