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338
C
HAPTER
13: IP M
ULTICAST
R
OUTING
Key Concepts
This section describes several terms and concepts related to IP multicast
routing.
Traffic Movement
Application sources generate the majority of IP multicast packets, but
group members and routers that are communicating (DVMRP and IGMP
messages) to establish the delivery path also generate IP multicast
packets.
Traffic from application sources always travels in one direction —
downstream
from the source to group members. Using various protocols,
network devices are responsible for determining where group members
exist and coordinating a loop-free delivery path from the source to them.
Traffic that relates to the delivery path can travel both
upstream
and
downstream
— between routers and between routers and group
members.
IP Multicast Groups
Users can join or leave an IP multicast group at any time. Users request
and cancel membership through mechanisms built into their desktop
application — perhaps visible to the user as
Go
and
Quit
buttons. There
are no restrictions on the physical location or number of members in a
group. A user may belong to one or more groups at any time.
Source-Group Pairs
Each IP multicast transmission can be linked to a unique pairing of a
source address and multicast group address (destination address). In
addition, network devices form a unique delivery path for each
source-group pair. Multicast routers and switches track information about
each source-group pair — mainly, the location of group members — and
dynamically adjust the delivery path to ensure that IP multicast packets
are delivered only where they need to go.
Summary of Contents for CoreBuilder 3500
Page 44: ...44 CHAPTER 2 MANAGEMENT ACCESS ...
Page 58: ...58 CHAPTER 3 SYSTEM PARAMETERS ...
Page 86: ...86 CHAPTER 5 ETHERNET ...
Page 112: ...112 CHAPTER 6 FIBER DISTRIBUTED DATA INTERFACE FDDI ...
Page 208: ...208 CHAPTER 9 VIRTUAL LANS ...
Page 256: ...256 CHAPTER 10 PACKET FILTERING ...
Page 330: ...330 CHAPTER 12 VIRTUAL ROUTER REDUNDANCY PROTOCOL VRRP ...
Page 356: ...356 CHAPTER 13 IP MULTICAST ROUTING ...
Page 418: ...418 CHAPTER 14 OPEN SHORTEST PATH FIRST OSPF ...
Page 519: ...RSVP 519 Figure 94 Sample RSVP Configuration Source station End stations Routers ...
Page 566: ...566 CHAPTER 18 DEVICE MONITORING ...
Page 572: ...572 APPENDIX A TECHNICAL SUPPORT ...
Page 592: ...592 INDEX ...