PIM Overview
631
A prune process is first initiated by a leaf router. As shown in Figure 187, a router
without any receiver attached to it (the router connected with Host A, for
example) sends a prune message, and this prune process goes on until only
necessary branches are left in the PIM-DM domain. These branches constitute the
SPT.
Figure 187
SPT establishment
The “flood and prune” process takes place periodically. A pruned state timeout
mechanism is provided. A pruned branch restarts multicast forwarding when the
pruned state times out and then is pruned again when it no longer has any
multicast receiver.
n
Pruning has a similar implementation in PIM-SM.
Graft
When a host attached to a pruned node joins a multicast group, to reduce the join
latency, PIM-DM uses a graft mechanism to resume data forwarding to that
branch. The process is as follows:
1
The node that needs to receive multicast data sends a graft message hop by hop
toward the source, as a request to join the SPT again.
2
Upon receiving this graft message, the upstream node puts the interface on which
the graft was received into the forwarding state and responds with a graft-ack
message to the graft sender.
3
If the node that sent a graft message does not receive a graft-ack message from its
upstream node, it will keep sending graft messages at a configurable interval until
it receives an acknowledgment from its upstream node.
Assert
If multiple multicast routers exist on a multi-access subnet, duplicate packets may
flow to the same subnet. To shut off duplicate flows, the assert mechanism is used
for election of a single multicast forwarder on a multi-access network.
Source
Server
Host A
Host B
Host C
Receiver
Receiver
Multicast packets
SPT
Prune message
Summary of Contents for 4800G Series
Page 26: ...26 CHAPTER NETWORKING APPLICATIONS ...
Page 30: ...30 CHAPTER 1 LOGGING IN TO AN ETHERNET SWITCH ...
Page 62: ...62 CHAPTER 3 LOGGING IN THROUGH TELNET ...
Page 70: ...70 CHAPTER 5 LOGGING IN THROUGH WEB BASED NETWORK MANAGEMENT SYSTEM ...
Page 72: ...72 CHAPTER 6 LOGGING IN THROUGH NMS ...
Page 82: ...82 CHAPTER 8 CONTROLLING LOGIN USERS ...
Page 98: ...98 CHAPTER 9 VLAN CONFIGURATION ...
Page 108: ...108 CHAPTER 10 VOICE VLAN CONFIGURATION ...
Page 119: ...GVRP Configuration Examples 119 DeviceB display vlan dynamic No dynamic vlans exist ...
Page 120: ...120 CHAPTER 11 GVRP CONFIGURATION ...
Page 160: ...160 CHAPTER 17 PORT ISOLATION CONFIGURATION ...
Page 172: ...172 CHAPTER 19 LINK AGGREGATION CONFIGURATION ...
Page 196: ...196 CHAPTER 22 DLDP CONFIGURATION ...
Page 240: ...240 CHAPTER 23 MSTP CONFIGURATION ...
Page 272: ...272 CHAPTER 27 RIP CONFIGURATION ...
Page 364: ...364 CHAPTER 29 IS IS CONFIGURATION ...
Page 426: ...426 CHAPTER 31 ROUTING POLICY CONFIGURATION ...
Page 442: ...442 CHAPTER 33 IPV6 RIPNG CONFIGURATION ...
Page 466: ...466 CHAPTER 35 IPV6 IS IS CONFIGURATION ...
Page 488: ...488 CHAPTER 36 IPV6 BGP CONFIGURATION ...
Page 498: ...498 CHAPTER 37 ROUTING POLICY CONFIGURATION ...
Page 540: ...540 CHAPTER 40 TUNNELING CONFIGURATION ...
Page 552: ...552 CHAPTER 41 MULTICAST OVERVIEW ...
Page 604: ...604 CHAPTER 43 MLD SNOOPING CONFIGURATION ...
Page 628: ...628 CHAPTER 46 IGMP CONFIGURATION ...
Page 700: ...700 CHAPTER 48 MSDP CONFIGURATION ...
Page 812: ...812 CHAPTER 57 DHCP SERVER CONFIGURATION ...
Page 822: ...822 CHAPTER 58 DHCP RELAY AGENT CONFIGURATION ...
Page 834: ...834 CHAPTER 61 BOOTP CLIENT CONFIGURATION ...
Page 850: ...850 CHAPTER 63 IPV4 ACL CONFIGURATION ...
Page 856: ...856 CHAPTER 64 IPV6 ACL CONFIGURATION ...
Page 860: ...860 CHAPTER 65 QOS OVERVIEW ...
Page 868: ...868 CHAPTER 66 TRAFFIC CLASSIFICATION TP AND LR CONFIGURATION ...
Page 888: ...888 CHAPTER 69 PRIORITY MAPPING ...
Page 894: ...894 CHAPTER 71 TRAFFIC MIRRORING CONFIGURATION ...
Page 904: ...904 CHAPTER 72 PORT MIRRORING CONFIGURATION ...
Page 930: ...930 CHAPTER 74 UDP HELPER CONFIGURATION ...
Page 990: ...990 CHAPTER 79 FILE SYSTEM MANAGEMENT CONFIGURATION ...
Page 1000: ...1000 CHAPTER 80 FTP CONFIGURATION ...
Page 1020: ...1020 CHAPTER 82 INFORMATION CENTER CONFIGURATION ...
Page 1038: ...1038 CHAPTER 84 SYSTEM MAINTAINING AND DEBUGGING ...
Page 1046: ...1046 CHAPTER 85 DEVICE MANAGEMENT ...
Page 1129: ...SSH Client Configuration Examples 1129 SwitchB ...
Page 1130: ...1130 CHAPTER 88 SSH CONFIGURATION ...
Page 1160: ...1160 CHAPTER 90 RRPP CONFIGURATION ...
Page 1180: ...1180 CHAPTER 91 PORT SECURITY CONFIGURATION ...
Page 1192: ...1192 CHAPTER 92 LLDP CONFIGURATION ...
Page 1202: ...1202 CHAPTER 93 POE CONFIGURATION ...
Page 1218: ...1218 CHAPTER 96 HTTPS CONFIGURATION ...