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LevelOne GTL-2691 User Manual

Page 548

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| Multicast Filtering

Layer 3 IGMP (Query used with Multicast Routing)

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the proxy devices independent of the multicast routing protocols used by

core routers.

IGMP proxy routing uses a tree topology, where the root of the tree is

connected to a complete multicast infrastructure (with the upstream

interface connected to the Internet as shown in the figure above). In such

a simple topology, it is sufficient to send the group membership

information learned upstream, and then to forward multicast packets

based upon that information to the downstream hosts. For the switch,

IGMP proxy routing has only one upstream connection to the core network

side and multiple downstream connections to the customer side.

The IGMP proxy routing tree must be manually configured by designating
one upstream interface and multiple downstream interfaces on each proxy

device. No other multicast routers except for the proxy devices can exist

within the tree, and the root of the tree must be connected to a wider

multicast infrastructure. Note that this protocol is limited to a single

administrative domain.

In more complicated scenarios where the topology is not a tree (such as

when there are diverse paths to multiple sources), a more robust failover

mechanism should be used. If more than one administrative domain is

involved, a multicast routing protocol should be used instead of IGMP

proxy.

To enable IGMP proxy service, follow these steps:

1.

Enable IP multicasting globally on the router (see

"Configuring Global

Settings for Multicast Routing" on page 708

).

2.

Enable IGMP on the downstream interfaces which require proxy
multicast service (see

"Configuring IGMP Interface Parameters" on

page 550

).

3.

Enable IGMP proxy on the interface that is attached to an upstream
multicast router using the proxy settings described in this section.

4.

Optional – Indicate how often the system will send unsolicited reports
to the upstream router using the Multicast > IGMP > Proxy page as

described later in this section.

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When IGMP proxy is enabled on an interface, that interface is known as

the upstream or host interface. This interface performs only the host

portion of IGMP by sending IGMP membership reports, and

automatically disables IGMP router functions.

Interfaces with IGMP enabled, but not located in the direction of the

multicast tree root are known as downstream or router interfaces.

These interfaces perform the standard IGMP router functions by

maintaining a database of all IGMP subscriptions on the downstream

interface. IGMP must therefore be enabled on all interfaces which

require proxy multicast service.