Asante Technologies 8000 사용자 설명서

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Advanced Management
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Multicast Traffic Management
Multicast traffic is a means to transmit a multimedia stream from the internet 
(a video conference, for example) without requiring a TCP connection from 
every remote host that wants to receive the stream. The stream is sent to the 
multicast address, and from there it’s propegated to all interested parties on 
the internet.
Traditional IP communication allows a host to send packets to a single host 
(unicast transmission) or to all hosts (broadcast transmission). IP multicast 
provides a third scheme, allowing a host to send packets to a subset of all 
hosts (group transmission).
Multicast Addresses
Multicasts are sent to special IP addresses in the range from 224.0.0.0 
through 239.0.0.0. These are also called "Class D" addresses. The IP 
multicast address always begins with the four bits 1110 (which identifies the 
address as a multicast). The remaining 28 bits of the multicast address 
specify the individual multicast group.
When an end station wants to join in a multicast group, it binds the multicast 
address of that group to its network interface. When a node is using an IP 
multicast address it also uses an ethernet multicast address. Ethernet IP 
multicast addresses begin 01:00:5e. The remaining 24 bits are the lowest 24 
bits of the IP multicast address. (However, there is not a 1-to-1 mapping of 
IP multicast addresses to Ethernet multicast addresses.)
When configuring a VLAN for multicast traffic, you specify the ehternet 
address for the multicast group. (See “Multicast Forwarding Database 
Configuration”.)
IGMP
Communication on a LAN between end stations and routers is managed by 
the  Internet Group Management Protocol (IGMP). For complete 
information about IGMP, see RFC 1112, "Host Extensions..." and RFC 2236, 
"Internet Group Management Protocol, Version 2" <ftp://ftp.isi.edu/in-notes/
rfc2236.txt>
A router that supports multicast and IGMP sends periodic messages called 
"queries" on its LAN interfaces. These queries inquire if any end stations 
want to join a multicast group. End stations signal their desire to join the 
multicast group by responding with an IGMP "report". By using a multicast