Rp discovery – H3C Technologies H3C SecPath F1000-E User Manual
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Figure 3 DR election
Join message
RP
DR
DR
Hello message
Register message
Source
Receiver
Receiver
As shown in
, the DR election process is as follows:
•
Routers on the multi-access network send hello messages to one another. The hello messages
contain the router priority for DR election. The router with the highest DR priority will become the DR.
In the case of a tie in the router priority, or if any router in the network does not support carrying the
DR-election priority in hello messages, the router with the highest IP address will win the DR election.
•
When the DR fails, a timeout in receiving hello message triggers a new DR election process among
the other routers.
RP discovery
The RP is the core of a PIM-SM domain. For a small-sized, simple network, one RP is enough for
forwarding information throughout the network, and the position of the RP can be statically specified on
each router in the PIM-SM domain. In most cases, however, a PIM-SM network covers a wide area and
a huge amount of multicast traffic needs to be forwarded through the RP. To lessen the RP burden and
optimize the topological structure of the RPT, multiple candidate RPs (C-RPs) can be configured in a
PIM-SM domain, among which an RP is dynamically elected through the bootstrap mechanism. Each
elected RP serves a different multicast group range. For this purpose, a bootstrap router (BSR) must be
configured. The BSR serves as the administrative core of the PIM-SM domain. A PIM-SM domain can
have only one BSR, but can have multiple candidate-BSRs (C-BSRs). Once the BSR fails, a new BSR is
automatically elected from the C-BSRs to avoid service interruption.
NOTE:
•
An RP can serve multiple multicast groups or all multicast groups. Only one RP can serve a given
multicast group at a time.
•
A device can serve as a C-RP and a C-BSR at the same time.
•
Currently, the Web interface does not support the static configuration of RP, C-RP, and C-BSR.
As shown in
, each C-RP periodically unicasts its advertisement messages (C-RP-Adv messages)
to the BSR. A C-RP-Adv message contains the address of the advertising C-RP and the multicast group
range it serves. The BSR collects these advertisement messages and chooses the appropriate C-RP
information for each multicast group to form an RP-set, which is a database of mappings between