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Cisco Catalyst Blade Switch 3020 for HP Software Configuration Guide
OL-8915-03
Chapter 22 Configuring IGMP Snooping and MVR
Understanding IGMP Snooping
Figure 22-1
Initial IGMP Join Message
Router A sends a general query to the switch, which forwards the query to ports 2 through 5, which are
all members of the same VLAN. Blade Server 1 wants to join multicast group 224.1.2.3 and multicasts
an IGMP membership report (IGMP join message) to the group. The switch CPU uses the information
in the IGMP report to set up a forwarding-table entry, as shown in
Table 22-1
, that includes the port
numbers of Blade Server 1 and the router.
The switch hardware can distinguish IGMP information packets from other packets for the multicast
group. The information in the table tells the switching engine to send frames addressed to the 224.1.2.3
multicast IP address that are not IGMP packets to the router and to the host that has joined the group.
If another blade server (for example, Blade Server 4) sends an unsolicited IGMP join message for the
same group (
Figure 22-2
), the CPU receives that message and adds the port number of Blade Server 4 to
the forwarding table as shown in
Table 22-2
. Note that because the forwarding table directs IGMP
messages only to the CPU, the message is not flooded to other ports on the switch. Any known multicast
traffic is forwarded to the group and not to the CPU.
Forwarding
table
CPU
Router A
IGMP report 224.1.2.3
VLAN
Switching engine
19
0
1
3
5
7
119647
Blade
Server 1
Blade
Server 2
Blade
Server 3
Blade
Server 4
Table 22-1
IGMP Snooping Forwarding Table
Destination Address
Type of Packet
Ports
224.1.2.3
IGMP
1, 2