Chapter 15: multicast filtering – Asante Technologies 40240/40480-10G User Manual

Page 284

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This switch can use Internet Group Management

Protocol (IGMP) to filter multicast traffic. IGMP

Snooping can be used to passively monitor or

“snoop” on exchanges between attached hosts

and an IGMP-enabled device, most commonly a

multicast router. In this way, the switch can discover the ports that want to join a

multicast group, and set its filters accordingly.
If there is no multicast router attached to the local subnet, multicast traffic and query

messages may not be received by the switch. In this case (Layer 2) IGMP Query

can be used to actively ask the attached hosts if they want to receive a specific

multicast service. IGMP Query thereby identifies the ports containing hosts

requesting to join the service and sends data out to those ports only. It then

propagates the service request up to any neighboring multicast switch/router to

ensure that it will continue to receive the multicast service.
The purpose of IP multicast filtering is to optimize a switched network’s

performance, so multicast packets will only be forwarded to those ports containing

multicast group hosts or multicast routers/switches, instead of flooding traffic to all

ports in the subnet (VLAN).

15-1

Chapter 15: Multicast Filtering

Multicasting is used to support real-time

applications such as videoconferencing or

streaming audio. A multicast server does not have

to establish a separate connection with each

client. It merely broadcasts its service to the

network, and any hosts that want to receive the

multicast register with their local multicast switch/

router. Although this approach reduces the

network overhead required by a multicast server,

the broadcast traffic must be carefully pruned at

every multicast switch/router it passes through to

ensure that traffic is only passed on to the hosts

Unicast

Flow

Multicast

Flow

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