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Multicast routing, Overview – Amer Networks E5Web GUI User Manual

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4.7. Multicast Routing

4.7.1. Overview

The Multicast Problem

Certain types of Internet interactions, such as conferencing and video broadcasts, require a
single client or host to send the same packet to multiple receivers. This could be achieved
through the sender duplicating the packet with different receiving IP addresses or by a broadcast
of the packet across the Internet. These solutions waste large amounts of sender resources or
network bandwidth and are therefore not satisfactory. An appropriate solution should also be
able to scale to large numbers of receivers.

The Multicast Routing Solution

Multicast Routing solves the problem by the network routers themselves, replicating and
forwarding packets via the optimum route to all members of a group.

The IETF standards that allow multicast routing are the following:

Class D of the IPv4 address space which is reserved for multicast traffic. Each multicast IP
address represent an arbitrary group of recipients.

The Internet Group Membership Protocol (IGMP) allows a receiver to tell the network that it is a
member of a particular multicast group.

Protocol Independent Multicast (PIM) is a group of routing protocols for deciding the optimal
path for multicast packets.

Underlying Principles

Multicast routing functions on the principle that an interested receiver joins a group for a
multicast by using the IGMP protocol. PIM routers can then duplicate and forward packets to all
members of such a multicast group, thus creating a distribution tree for packet flow. Rather than
acquiring new network information, PIM uses the routing information from existing protocols,
such as OSPF, to decide the optimal path.

Reverse Path Forwarding

A key mechanism in the multicast routing process is Reverse Path Forwarding. For unicast traffic, a
router is concerned only with a packet's destination. With multicast, the router is also concerned
with a packets source since it forwards the packet on paths which are known to be downstream,
away from the packet's source. This approach is adopted to avoid loops in the distribution tree.

Routing to the Correct Interface

By default, multicast packets are routed by cOS Core to the core interface (in other words, to cOS
Core itself ). SAT Multiplex rules are set up in the IP rule set in order to perform forwarding to the
correct interfaces. This is demonstrated in the examples described later.

Note: Interface multicast handling must be On or Auto

Chapter 4: Routing

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