Basic concepts in igmp snooping, Igmp snooping related ports – H3C Technologies H3C S3100V2 Series Switches User Manual

Page 21

Advertising
background image

13

Reducing Layer 2 broadcast packets, saving network bandwidth

Enhancing the security of multicast traffic

Facilitating the implementation of per-host accounting

Basic concepts in IGMP snooping

IGMP snooping related ports

In

Figure 11

, Router A connects to the multicast source, IGMP snooping runs on Switch A and Switch B,

and Host A and Host C are receiver hosts—also called “multicast group members.”

Figure 11 IGMP snooping related ports

IGMP snooping involves the following ports:

Router port—A router port is a port on a Layer 2 switch that leads toward a Layer 3 multicast
device—DR or IGMP querier. In

Figure 11

, Ethernet 1/0/1 of Switch A and Ethernet 1/0/1 of

Switch B are router ports. Each switch registers all its local router ports in its router port list.

Member port—A member port is a port on a Layer 2 switch that leads toward multicast group
members. In

Figure 11

, Ethernet 1/0/2 and Ethernet 1/0/3 of Switch A and Ethernet 1/0/2 of

Switch B are member ports. Each switch registers all the member ports on the local device in its

IGMP snooping forwarding table.

NOTE:

Whenever mentioned in this document, a router port is a port on the switch that leads the switch to a
Layer 3 multicast device, rather than a port on a router.

Unless otherwise specified, router/member ports mentioned in this document include static and
dynamic ports.

An IGMP-snooping-enabled switch deems that all its ports on which IGMP general queries with the
source IP address other than 0.0.0.0 or PIM hello messages are received are dynamic router ports.

Advertising