ZyXEL Communications Corporation VSG1435B101 Manuel D’Utilisation

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VSG1435-B101 Series User’s Guide
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IGMP
14.1  Overview
Traditionally, IP packets are transmitted in one of either two ways - Unicast (1 
sender to 1 recipient) or Broadcast (1 sender to everybody on the network). 
Multicast delivers IP packets to just a group of hosts on the network.
IGMP (Internet Group Multicast Protocol) is a network-layer protocol used to 
establish membership in a multicast group - it is not used to carry user data. See 
RFC 1112, RFC 2236, and RFC 3376 for information on IGMP versions 1, 2, and 3 
respectively.
14.1.1  What You Can Do in this Chapter
• Use  the  IGMP General screen to configure general IGMP proxy and IGMP 
packet processing settings (
Section 14.2 on page 206
).
• Use  the  IGMP Filter screens to control IGMP access (
Section 14.3 on page 
208
). 
• Use  the  IGMP ACL screens to block or allow access to specific multicast media 
channels (
Section 14.4 on page 213
). 
14.1.2  What You Need to Know
IP Multicast Addresses
In IPv4, a multicast address allows a device to send packets to a specific group of 
hosts (multicast group) in a different sub-network. A multicast IP address 
represents a traffic receiving group, not individual receiving devices. IP addresses 
in the Class D range (224.0.0.0 to 239.255.255.255) are used for IP multicasting. 
Certain IP multicast numbers are reserved by IANA for special purposes (see the 
IANA web site for more information).
IGMP Snooping
A layer-2 switch can passively snoop on IGMP Query, Report and Leave (IGMP 
version 2) packets transferred between IP multicast routers/switches and IP