Dell PowerEdge M420 Dell Converged Enhanced Ethernet Administrator's Guide - Page 145
Configuring IGMP, In this About IGMP, Active IGMP snooping
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Chapter Configuring IGMP 15 In this chapter •About IGMP 127 •Configuring IGMP 128 •Configuring IGMP snooping querier 128 •Monitoring IGMP 129 About IGMP Multicast Control packet and Data Forwarding through a Layer-2 switch configured with VLANs is most easily achieved by Layer-2 forwarding of received Multicast Packets on all the member ports of the VLAN interfaces. However, this simple approach is not bandwidth efficient, because only a subset of member ports may be connected to devices interested in receiving those Multicast packets. In the worst case scenario the data would get forwarded to all port members of a VLAN with a large number of member ports (for example, all 24 ports), even if only a single VLAN member is interested in receiving the data. Such scenarios can lead to loss of throughput for a switch that gets hit by a high rate of Multicast Data Traffic. Internet Group Management Protocol (IGMP) snooping is a mechanism by which a Layer-2 switch can effectively address this issue of inefficient Multicast Forwarding to VLAN port members. Snooping involves "learning" forwarding states for Multicast Data traffic on VLAN port members from the IGMP control (Join/Leave) packets received on them. The Layer-2 switch also provides for a way to configure forwarding states statically through the CLI. NOTE Dell Fabric OS supports IGMPv1 and IGMPv2. Active IGMP snooping IGMP snooping is normally passive by nature, as it simply monitors IGMP traffic without filtering. However, active IGMP snooping actively filters IGMP packets to reduce load on the multicast router. Upstream traffic is filtered so that only the minimal quantity of information is sent. The switch ensures the router only has a single entry for the VLAN, regardless of the number of active listeners downstream. In active IGMP snooping, the router only knows about the most recent member of the VLAN. If there are two active listeners in a VLAN and the original member drops from the VLAN, the switch determines that the router does not need this information as the status of the VLAN remains unchanged. However the next time there is a routine query from the router, the switch will forward the reply from the remaining host to prevent the router from assuming there are no active listeners. Dell Converged Enhanced Ethernet Administrator's Guide 127 53-1002116-01