Using multicast filtering, The concept of multicast filtering, Using multicast filtering -40 – Moxa Technologies EDS-518A Series User Manual
Page 55: The concept of multicast filtering -40

EDS-518A Series User’s Manual
Featured Functions
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NOTE
The physical network can have a maximum of 64 VLAN settings.
Using Multicast Filtering
Multicast filtering improves the performance of networks that carry multicast traffic. This section 
explains multicasts, multicast filtering, and how multicast filtering can be implemented on your 
EDS-518A. 
The Concept of Multicast Filtering
What is an IP Multicast?
A multicast is a packet sent by one host to multiple hosts. Only those hosts that belong to a 
specific multicast group will receive the multicast. If the network is set up correctly, a multicast 
can only be sent to an end-station or a subset of end-stations on a LAN or VLAN that belong to 
the multicast group. Multicast group members can be distributed across multiple subnets, so that 
multicast transmissions can occur within a campus LAN or over a WAN. In addition, networks 
that support IP multicast send only one copy of the desired information across the network until 
the delivery path that reaches group members diverges. To make more efficient use of network 
bandwidth, it is only at these points that multicast packets are duplicated and forwarded. A 
multicast packet has a multicast group address in the destination address field of the packet’s IP 
header. 
Benefits of Multicast
The benefits of using IP multicast are that it:
y
Uses the most efficient, sensible method to deliver the same information to many receivers
with only one transmission.
y
Reduces the load on the source (for example, a server) since it will not need to produce
several copies of the same data.
y
Makes efficient use of network bandwidth and scales well as the number of multicast group
members increases.
y
Works with other IP protocols and services, such as Quality of Service (QoS).
Multicast transmission makes more sense and is more efficient than unicast transmission for some 
applications. For example, multicasts are often used for video-conferencing, since high volumes of 
traffic must be sent to several end-stations at the same time, but where broadcasting the traffic to 
all end-stations would cause a substantial reduction in network performance. Furthermore, several 
industrial automation protocols, such as Allen-Bradley, EtherNet/IP, Siemens Profibus, and 
Foundation Fieldbus HSE (High Speed Ethernet), use multicast. These industrial Ethernet 
protocols use publisher/subscriber communications models by multicasting packets that could 
flood a network with heavy traffic. IGMP Snooping is used to prune multicast traffic so that it 
travels only to those end destinations that require the traffic, reducing the amount of traffic on the 
Ethernet LAN. 
Multicast Filtering
Multicast filtering ensures that only end-stations that have joined certain groups receive multicast 
traffic. With multicast filtering, network devices only forward multicast traffic to the ports that are 
connected to registered end-stations. The following two figures illustrate how a network behaves 
without multicast filtering, and with multicast filtering. 
