Cisco Cisco SG200-26P 26-port Gigabit PoE Smart Switch Manuale Di Manutenzione

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Multicast
Configuring IGMP Snooping
Cisco Small Business SF200E Series Advanced Smart Switch
148
8
 
STEP  4
Set the type to indicate whether the entry is statically configured or dynamically 
learned. Ports can become members of a particular MAC address group 
dynamically through the exchange of IGMP packets, or you can statically configure 
them as members. 
STEP  5
Click Apply. Your changes are saved to the Running Configuration.
Configuring IGMP Snooping
Internet Group Management Protocol (IGMP) is a layer 3 Internet protocol that 
enables IPv4 networks to manage memberships to multicast groups. (IPv6 
multicast traffic is managed using the MLD protocol, as described in 
.) IGMP communication occurs between IGMP routers and IGMP-
enabled hosts (clients). Although the switch does not initiate or reply to IGMP 
packets, it can be configured to listen to IGMP communication between routers 
and clients that are connected by the switch, and to make forwarding decisions 
that help to reduce unnecessary network traffic.This listening behavior is referred 
to as IGMP snooping. This is particularly beneficial for high-bandwidth multicast 
network traffic. 
Ordinarily, when the switch receives broadcast or multicast packets, the switch 
forwards a copy into each of the remaining network segments. This approach 
works well for broadcast packets that are intended to be processed by all 
connected nodes. For multicast packets, however, this approach could lead to less 
efficient use of network bandwidth, particularly when the packet is intended for 
only a small number of nodes; packets are flooded into network segments where 
no node has an interest in receiving the packet.
IGMP snooping enables the switch to intercept membership reports from IGMP 
clients and queries from routers. If the intercepted communications indicate that 
no IGMP clients exist on a link for a particular multicast destination address within 
a VLAN, then the switch does not send copies of those multicast packets to that 
network segment.
IGMP snooping can be enabled or disabled on each VLAN. When enabled on a 
VLAN, IGMP snooping is performed on all interfaces that are members of that 
VLAN.
Although IGMP is based on IP multicast addresses, the switch performs the actual 
multicast forwarding based on the equivalent MAC addresses.