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LevelOne GTL-2691 User Manual

Page 514

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C

HAPTER

15

| Multicast Filtering

Layer 2 IGMP (Snooping and Query)

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N

OTE

:

When the switch is configured to use IGMPv3 snooping, the

snooping version may be downgraded to version 2 or version 1, depending

on the version of the IGMP query packets detected on each VLAN.

N

OTE

:

IGMP snooping will not function unless a multicast router port is

enabled on the switch. This can accomplished in one of two ways. A static

router port can be manually configured (see

"Specifying Static Interfaces

for a Multicast Router" on page 519

). Using this method, the router port is

never timed out, and will continue to function until explicitly removed. The

other method relies on the switch to dynamically create multicast routing

ports whenever multicast routing protocol packets or IGMP query packets

are detected on a port.

N

OTE

:

A maximum of up to 1024 multicast entries can be maintained for

IGMP snooping and Multicast Routing when both of these features are

enabled. Once the table is full, no new entries are learned. Any subsequent

multicast traffic not found in the table is dropped if unregistered-flooding is

disabled (default behavior) and no router port is configured in the attached

VLAN, or flooded throughout the VLAN if unregistered-flooding is enabled

(see

"Configuring IGMP Snooping and Query Parameters" on page 515

).

Static IGMP Router Interface – If IGMP snooping cannot locate the IGMP

querier, you can manually designate a known IGMP querier (i.e., a

multicast router/switch) connected over the network to an interface on

your switch (

page 519

). This interface will then join all the current

multicast groups supported by the attached router/switch to ensure that

multicast traffic is passed to all appropriate interfaces within the switch.

Static IGMP Host Interface – For multicast applications that you need to

control more carefully, you can manually assign a multicast service to

specific interfaces on the switch (

page 521

).

IGMP Snooping with Proxy Reporting – The switch supports last leave, and

query suppression (as defined in DSL Forum TR-101, April 2006):

Last Leave: Intercepts, absorbs and summarizes IGMP leaves coming

from IGMP hosts. IGMP leaves are relayed upstream only when

necessary, that is, when the last user leaves a multicast group.

Query Suppression: Intercepts and processes IGMP queries in such a

way that IGMP specific queries are never sent to client ports.

The only deviation from TR-101 is that report suppression, and the

marking of IGMP traffic initiated by the switch with priority bits as defined

in R-250 is not supported.