Neighbor discovery, Rp discovery, Df election – H3C Technologies H3C S10500 Series Switches User Manual

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Neighbor discovery

BIDIR-PIM uses the same neighbor discovery mechanism as PIM-SM does. For more information, see

Neighbor discovery

.”

RP discovery

BIDIR-PIM uses the same RP discovery mechanism as PIM-SM does. For more information, see “

RP

discovery

.”

In PIM-SM, an RP must be specified with a real IP address. In BIDIR-PIM, however, an RP can be specified

with a virtual IP address, which is called the rendezvous point address (RPA). The link corresponding to

the RPA’s subnet is called the rendezvous point link (RPL). All interfaces connected to the RPL can act as

the RP, and they back up one another.

NOTE:

In BIDIR-PIM, an RPF interface is the interface pointing to an RP, and an RPF neighbor is the address of the
next hop to the RP.

DF election

On a network segment with multiple multicast routers, the same multicast packets might be forwarded to

the RP repeatedly. To address this issue, BIDIR-PIM uses a DF election mechanism to elect a unique

designated forwarder (DF) for each RP on every network segment within the BIDIR-PIM domain, and

allows only the DF to forward multicast data to the RP.

NOTE:

DF election is not necessary for an RPL.

Figure 46 DF election

As shown in

Figure 46

, without the DF election mechanism, both Router B and Router C can receive

multicast packets from Route A, and they might both forward the packets to downstream routers on the

local subnet. As a result, the RP (Router E) receives duplicate multicast packets. With the DF election

mechanism, once receiving the RP information, Router B and Router C initiate a DF election process for

the RP:

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