186
C
HAPTER
15: M
ULTICAST
O
VERVIEW
the server must send many pieces of information with the same content to the
users. Therefore, the limited bandwidth becomes the bottleneck in information
transmission. This shows that unicast is not good for the transmission of a great
deal of information.
Information
Transmission in the
Broadcast Mode
When you adopt broadcast, the system transmits information to all users on a
network. Any user on the network can receive the information, no matter the
information is needed or not. Figure 56 shows information transmission in
broadcast mode.
Figure 56
Information transmission in the broadcast mode
Assume that Hosts B, D, and E need the information. The source server broadcasts
this information through routers, and Hosts A and C on the network also receive
this information.
As we can see from the information transmission process, the security and legal
use of paid service cannot be guaranteed. In addition, when only a small number
of users on the same network need the information, the utilization ratio of the
network resources is very low and the bandwidth resources are greatly wasted.
Therefore, broadcast is disadvantageous in transmitting data to specific users;
moreover, broadcast occupies large bandwidth.
Information
Transmission in the
Multicast Mode
As described in the previous sections, unicast is suitable for networks with sparsely
distributed users, whereas broadcast is suitable for networks with densely
distributed users. When the number of users requiring information is not certain,
unicast and broadcast deliver a low efficiency.
Multicast solves this problem. When some users on a network require specified
information, the multicast information sender (namely, the multicast source) sends
Source
Server
Receiver
Receiver
Receiver
Host A
Host B
Host C
Host D
Host E
Packets for all the network
Summary of Contents for Switch 4210 9-Port
Page 22: ...20 CHAPTER 1 CLI CONFIGURATION ...
Page 74: ...72 CHAPTER 3 CONFIGURATION FILE MANAGEMENT ...
Page 84: ...82 CHAPTER 5 VLAN CONFIGURATION ...
Page 96: ...94 CHAPTER 8 IP PERFORMANCE CONFIGURATION ...
Page 108: ...106 CHAPTER 9 PORT BASIC CONFIGURATION ...
Page 122: ...120 CHAPTER 11 PORT ISOLATION CONFIGURATION ...
Page 140: ...138 CHAPTER 13 MAC ADDRESS TABLE MANAGEMENT ...
Page 234: ...232 CHAPTER 17 802 1X CONFIGURATION ...
Page 246: ...244 CHAPTER 20 AAA OVERVIEW ...
Page 270: ...268 CHAPTER 21 AAA CONFIGURATION ...
Page 292: ...290 CHAPTER 26 DHCP BOOTP CLIENT CONFIGURATION ...
Page 318: ...316 CHAPTER 29 MIRRORING CONFIGURATION ...
Page 340: ...338 CHAPTER 30 CLUSTER ...
Page 362: ...360 CHAPTER 33 SNMP CONFIGURATION ...
Page 368: ...366 CHAPTER 34 RMON CONFIGURATION ...
Page 450: ...448 CHAPTER 39 TFTP CONFIGURATION ...
Page 451: ......
Page 452: ...450 CHAPTER 39 TFTP CONFIGURATION ...
Page 470: ...468 CHAPTER 40 INFORMATION CENTER ...
Page 496: ...494 CHAPTER 44 DEVICE MANAGEMENT ...