Enabling IGMP Immediate-Leave
If the querier does not receive a response to a group-specific or group-and-source query, it sends another (querier robustness value). Then,
after no response, it removes the group from the outgoing interface for the subnet.
IGMP immediate leave reduces leave latency by enabling a router to immediately delete the group membership on an interface after
receiving a Leave message (it does not send any group-specific or group-and-source queries before deleting the entry).
•
Configure the system for IGMP immediate leave.
ip igmp immediate-leave
•
View the enable status of the IGMP immediate leave feature.
EXEC Privilege mode
show ip igmp interface
View the enable status of this feature using the command from EXEC Privilege mode, as shown in the example in
.
IGMP Snooping
IGMP snooping enables switches to use information in IGMP packets to generate a forwarding table that associates ports with multicast
groups so that when they receive multicast frames, they can forward them only to interested receivers.
Multicast packets are addressed with multicast MAC addresses, which represent a group of devices, rather than one unique device.
Switches forward multicast frames out of all ports in a virtual local area network (VLAN) by default, even though there may be only some
interested hosts, which is a waste of bandwidth.
If you enable IGMP snooping on a VLT unit, IGMP snooping dynamically learned groups and multicast router ports are made to learn on the
peer by explicitly tunneling the received IGMP control packets.
IGMP Snooping Implementation Information
•
IGMP snooping on Dell Networking OS uses IP multicast addresses not MAC addresses.
•
IGMP snooping is supported on all stack members.
•
IGMP snooping reacts to spanning tree protocol (STP) and multiple spanning tree protocol (MSTP) topology changes by sending a
general query on the interface that transitions to the forwarding state.
•
If IGMP snooping is enabled on a PIM-enabled VLAN interface, data packets using the router as an Layer 2 hop may be dropped. To
avoid this scenario, Dell Networking recommends that users enable IGMP snooping on server-facing end-point VLANs only.
Configuring IGMP Snooping
Configuring IGMP snooping is a one-step process. To enable, view, or disable IGMP snooping, use the following commands.
There is no specific configuration needed for IGMP snooping with virtual link trunking (VLT). For information about VLT configurations,
refer to
•
Enable IGMP snooping on a switch.
CONFIGURATION mode
ip igmp snooping enable
•
View the configuration.
CONFIGURATION mode
show running-config
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Internet Group Management Protocol (IGMP)
Summary of Contents for S4048T-ON
Page 1: ...Dell Configuration Guide for the S4048 ON System 9 11 2 1 ...
Page 148: ...Figure 10 BFD Three Way Handshake State Changes 148 Bidirectional Forwarding Detection BFD ...
Page 251: ...Dell Control Plane Policing CoPP 251 ...
Page 363: ... RPM Synchronization GARP VLAN Registration Protocol GVRP 363 ...
Page 511: ...Figure 64 Inspecting the LAG Configuration Link Aggregation Control Protocol LACP 511 ...
Page 558: ...Figure 84 Configuring Interfaces for MSDP 558 Multicast Source Discovery Protocol MSDP ...
Page 559: ...Figure 85 Configuring OSPF and BGP for MSDP Multicast Source Discovery Protocol MSDP 559 ...
Page 564: ...Figure 88 MSDP Default Peer Scenario 2 564 Multicast Source Discovery Protocol MSDP ...
Page 565: ...Figure 89 MSDP Default Peer Scenario 3 Multicast Source Discovery Protocol MSDP 565 ...
Page 841: ...Figure 115 Single and Double Tag TPID Match Service Provider Bridging 841 ...
Page 842: ...Figure 116 Single and Double Tag First byte TPID Match 842 Service Provider Bridging ...