Implementation of rpf check in multicast – H3C Technologies H3C S10500 Series Switches User Manual

Page 92

Advertising
background image

77

The router automatically chooses an optimal unicast route by searching its unicast routing table,

and using the IP address of the packet source as the destination address. The outgoing interface

in the corresponding routing entry is the RPF interface and the next hop is the RPF neighbor. The

router considers the path along which the packet from the RPF neighbor arrived on the RPF

interface to be the shortest path that leads back to the source.

The router automatically chooses an optimal MBGP route by searching its MBGP routing table,

and using the IP address of the packet source as the destination address. The outgoing interface
in the corresponding routing entry is the RPF interface and the next hop is the RPF neighbor.

The router automatically chooses an optimal multicast static route by searching its multicast

static routing table, and using the IP address of the packet source as the destination address.

The corresponding routing entry explicitly defines the RPF interface and the RPF neighbor.

2.

The router selects one of these optimal routes as the RPF route. The selection process is as follows:

If configured to use the longest match principle, the router selects the longest match route from

these optimal routes. If the three routes have the same mask, the router selects the route with the

highest priority. If the three routes have the same priority, the router selects a route as the RPF
route according to the sequence of multicast static route, MBGP route, and unicast route.

If not configured to use the longest match principle, the router selects the route with the highest

priority. If the three routes have the same priority, the router selects a route as the RPF route

according to the sequence of multicast static route, MBGP route, and unicast route.

NOTE:

The

packet source means different things in different situations:

For a packet traveling along the shortest path tree (SPT) from the multicast source to the receivers or the
rendezvous point (RP), the packet source for RPF check is the multicast source.

For a packet traveling along the rendezvous point tree (RPT) from the RP to the receivers, or along the
source-side RPT from the multicast source to the RP, the packet source for RPF check is the RP.

For a bootstrap message from the bootstrap router (BSR), the packet source for RPF check is the BSR.

For more information about the concepts of SPT, RPT, source-side RPT, RP, and BSR, see the chapter “PIM
configuration.”

Implementation of RPF check in multicast

Implementing an RPF check on each received multicast data packet would be a big burden to the router.

The use of a multicast forwarding table is the solution to this issue. When creating a multicast routing

entry and a multicast forwarding entry for a multicast packet, the router sets the RPF interface of the
packet as the incoming interface of the (S, G) entry. After receiving an (S, G) multicast packet, the router

first searches its multicast forwarding table:

1.

If the corresponding (S, G) entry does not exist in the multicast forwarding table, the packet
undergoes an RPF check. The router creates a multicast routing entry based on the relevant routing

information and adds the entry into the multicast forwarding table, with the RPF interface as the

incoming interface.

If the interface that received the packet is the RPF interface, the RPF check succeeds and the

router forwards the packet to all the outgoing interfaces.

If the interface that received the packet is not the RPF interface, the RPF check fails and the router

discards the packet.

2.

If the corresponding (S, G) entry exists, and the interface that received the packet is the incoming
interface, the router forwards the packet to all the outgoing interfaces.

Advertising