Roles in multicast – H3C Technologies H3C WX3000 Series Unified Switches User Manual

Page 421

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43-4

Figure 43-3

Information transmission in the multicast mode

Source

Server

Receiver

Receiver

Receiver

Host A

Host B

Host C

Host D

Host E

Packets for the multicast group

Assume that Hosts B, D and E need the information. To transmit the information to the right users, it is
necessary to group Hosts B, D and E into a receiver set. The routers on the network duplicate and
distribute the information based on the distribution of the receivers in this set. Finally, the information is
correctly delivered to Hosts B, D, and E.

The advantages of multicast over unicast are as follows:

z

No matter how many receivers exist, there is only one copy of the same multicast data flow on each
link.

z

With the multicast mode used to transmit information, an increase of the number of users does not
add to the network burden remarkably.

The advantages of multicast over broadcast are as follows:

z

A multicast data flow can be sent only to the receiver that requires the data.

z

Multicast brings no waste of network resources and makes proper use of bandwidth.

Roles in Multicast

The following roles are involved in multicast transmission:

z

An information sender is referred to as a multicast source (“Source” in

Figure 43-3

).

z

Each receiver is a multicast group member (“Receiver” in

Figure 43-3

).

z

All receivers interested in the same information form a multicast group. Multicast groups are not
subject to geographic restrictions.

z

A router that supports Layer 3 multicast is called multicast router or Layer 3 multicast device. In
addition to providing multicast routing, a multicast router can also manage multicast group
members.

For a better understanding of the multicast concept, you can assimilate multicast transmission to the
transmission of TV programs, as shown in

Table 43-1

.

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