Asante Technologies 8000 User Manual
Page 135

Multicast Traffic Management
Page 4-45
routing protocol, such as Protocol-Independent Multicast (PIM), routers 
maintain forwarding tables that they use to forward multicast datagrams.
Packets delivered to members of the multicast group are identified by a 
single multicast group address. Any host, regardless of whether it is a 
member of a group, can send to a group. However, only the members of a 
group receive the message. Membership in a multicast group is dynamic; 
hosts can join and leave at any time. There is no restriction on the location or 
number of members in a multicast group. A host can be a member of more 
than one multicast group at a time. 
IGMP Snooping
A traditional layer-2 switch is unable to determine which end stations on the 
LAN are interested in which multicast groups. To avoid unnecessary 
flooding, the switch may use IGMP Snooping. That means the switch listens 
to IGMP messages to learn which ports want multicast traffic from which 
multicast groups. The switch inserts the correct Ethernet multicast address 
into the forwarding table for the ports where an end station has joined a 
multicast group.
GMRP - GARP Multicast Registration Protocol
A limitation of IGMP Snooping is that all IP multicast traffic must be 
examined to build the tables necessary to prune the multicasts. GMRP, an 
IEEE standard, provides a mechanism for end stations to directly inform a 
switch of its interest in a particular multicast group. 
When it wants to join a group, an end station sends a GARP packet to the 
GMRP multicast address, 01:80:00:00:20. Switches that support GMRP use 
such GARP packets to notify routers of the presence of group members, and 
to configure their forwarding tables to avoid unnecessary flooding. 
K
Note: GMRP operates at layer 2, while IGMP is an IP 
protocol and operates at layer 3.
For more information about GMRP, see ANSI/IEEE Std. 802.1D -- 1998 
Edition, which includes the 802.1p standard. See 
more information.
IP Multicast Quality of Service - RSVP
The IntraCore 8000 also supports the industry standard Resource 
Reservation Protocol (RSVP). RSVP allows an end station to reserve 
resources across the net in an attempt to maintain quality of service from a 
multicast provider. The IntraCore 8000 monitors RSVP messages so it can 
