5 igmp snooping – PLANET WGS3-2820 User Manual

Page 115

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User’s Manual of WGS3-2820/WGS3-5220

115

4.3.5 IGMP Snooping

Computers and network devices that want to receive multicast transmissions need to inform nearby routers that they will

become members of a multicast group. The Internet Group Management Protocol (IGMP) is used to communicate this

information. IGMP is also used to periodically check the multicast group for members that are no longer active. In the case

where there is more than one multicast router on a sub network, one router is elected as the ‘queried’. This router then keeps

track of the membership of the multicast groups that have active members. The information received from IGMP is then used to

determine if multicast packets should be forwarded to a given sub network or not. The router can check, using IGMP, to see if

there is at least one member of a multicast group on a given subnet work. If there are no members on a sub network, packets

will not be forwarded to that sub network.

IGMP Versions 1 and 2

Multicast groups allow members to join or leave at any time. IGMP provides the method for members and multicast routers to

communicate when joining or leaving a multicast group.

IGMP version 1 is defined in RFC 1112. It has a fixed packet size and no optional data.

The format of an IGMP packet is shown below:

IGMP Message Format


Octets

0

8 16

31

Type Response

Time

Checksum

Group Address (all zeros if this is a query)

The IGMP Type codes are shown below:

Type Meaning

0x11

Membership Query (if Group Address is 0.0.0.0)

0x11

Specific Group Membership Query (if Group Address is Present)

0x16

Membership Report (version 2)

0x17

Leave a Group (version 2)

0x12

Membership Report (version 1)

IGMP packets enable multicast routers to keep track of the membership of multicast groups, on their respective sub networks.

The following outlines what is communicated between a multicast router and a multicast group member using IGMP.

A host sends an IGMP “report” to join a group

A host will never send a report when it wants to leave a group (for version 1).

A host will send a “leave” report when it wants to leave a group (for version 2).

Multicast routers send IGMP queries (to the all-hosts group address: 224.0.0.1) periodically to see whether any group members

exist on their sub networks. If there is no response from a particular group, the router assumes that there are no group members

on the network.

The Time-to-Live (TTL) field of query messages is set to 1 so that the queries will not be forwarded to other sub networks.

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