
432
C
HAPTER
18: IP M
ULTICAST
R
OUTING
How IGMP
Supports
IP Multicast
IGMP provides a way for routers and switches to learn where group
members exist on a network, and thus provides a critical function in the IP
multicast packet delivery process.
Electing the Querier
On each subnetwork or broadcast domain (VLAN), the communication
between routers, switches, and group members begins with one
IGMP-capable device being elected as the
querier
— that is, the device
that asks all hosts to respond with a report of the IP multicast groups that
they wish to join or to which they already belong. The querier is always
the device with the lowest IP address in the subnetwork. It can be a
router or a Layer 2 switch. The network traffic flows most efficiently if the
querier is the closest device to the sources of IP multicast traffic.
Query Messages
The querier normally sends messages called
IGMP Host Membership
Query
Messages
, or
queries
, every 125 seconds. All the hosts hear the
query because it is addressed to 224.0.0.1, the
all systems on this
subnetwork
Class D address. A query is not forwarded beyond the
subnetwork from which it originates.
Host Messages
Hosts use IGMP to build their own types of IP multicast messages, as
described in this section.
Response to Queries
Hosts respond to queries with
IGMP Host Membership Report
messages,
or simply
IGMP reports
. These reports do not travel beyond their origin
subnetworks, and hosts send them at random intervals to prevent the
querier from being overwhelmed.
A host sends a separate report for each group that it wants to join or to
which it currently belongs. Hosts do not send reports if they are not
group members.
If a router does not receive at least one host report for a particular group
after two queries, the router assumes that members no longer exist and it
prunes the interface for that source-group spanning tree.
Summary of Contents for 4007
Page 36: ...36 ABOUT THIS GUIDE ...
Page 37: ...I UNDERSTANDING YOUR SWITCH 4007 SYSTEM Chapter 1 Configuration Overview ...
Page 38: ......
Page 50: ...50 CHAPTER 1 CONFIGURATION OVERVIEW ...
Page 52: ......
Page 70: ...70 CHAPTER 3 INSTALLING MANAGEMENT MODULES ...
Page 110: ...110 CHAPTER 4 CONFIGURING AND USING EME OPTIONS ...
Page 130: ...130 CHAPTER 5 MANAGING THE CHASSIS POWER AND TEMPERATURE ...
Page 222: ...222 CHAPTER 11 IP MULTICAST FILTERING WITH IGMP ...
Page 240: ...240 CHAPTER 13 RESILIENT LINKS ...
Page 304: ...304 CHAPTER 14 VIRTUAL LANS VLANS ...
Page 350: ...350 CHAPTER 15 PACKET FILTERING ...
Page 506: ...506 CHAPTER 19 OPEN SHORTEST PATH FIRST OSPF ROUTING ...
Page 534: ...534 CHAPTER 20 IPX ROUTING ...
Page 612: ...612 CHAPTER 22 QOS AND RSVP ...
Page 656: ...656 CHAPTER 23 DEVICE MONITORING ...
Page 657: ...IV REFERENCE Appendix A Technical Support Index ...
Page 658: ......
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