Introduction – HP 3500YL User Manual

Page 108

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PIM-SM (Sparse Mode)
Introduction

Introduction

Feature

Default

CLI

Enable PIM-SM Support

Disabled

4-26

Configure PIM-SM on VLAN
Interfaces

Disabled

4-28

Configure Router PIM Context

Bootstrap Router Candidate
Rendezvous-Point Candidate
Notification Traps
Shortest-Path Tree

Disabled

4-35
4-37
4-41
4-42

Display Multicast Route Data

n/a

4-47

Display PIM-Specific Data

n/a

4-51

Display PIM Neighbor Data

n/a

4-57

Display BSR and C-RP Data

n/a

4-61

Display Current RP-Set

n/a

4-63

Display Candidate-RP Data

n/a

4-65

In a network where IP multicast traffic is transmitted for multimedia applica­
tions, such traffic is blocked at routed interface (VLAN) boundaries unless a
multicast routing protocol is running. Protocol Independent Multicast (PIM)
is a family of routing protocols that form multicast trees to forward traffic
from multicast sources to subnets that have used a protocol such as IGMP to
request the traffic. PIM relies on the unicast routing tables created by any of
several unicast routing protocols to identify the path back to a multicast
source (reverse path forwarding, or RPF). With this information, PIM sets up
the distribution tree for the multicast traffic. The PIM-DM and PIM-SM proto­
cols on the switches covered by this manual enable and control multicast
traffic routing.

IGMP provides the multicast traffic link between a host and a multicast router
running PIM-SM. Both PIM-SM and IGMP must be enabled on VLANs whose
member ports have directly connected hosts with a valid need to join multicast
groups.

PIM-DM (described in chapter 3) is used in networks where, at any given time,
multicast group members exist in relatively large numbers and are present in
most subnets. However, using PIM-DM in networks where multicast sources

4-4

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