3com S7906E 설치 설명서

다운로드
페이지 2621
 
1-6 
Multimedia and streaming applications, such as Web TV, Web radio, and real-time video/audio 
conferencing. 
Communication for training and cooperative operations, such as distance learning and 
telemedicine.  
Data warehouse and financial applications (stock quotes). 
Any other point-to-multipoint data distribution application. 
Multicast Models 
Based on how the receivers treat the multicast sources, there are three multicast models: any-source 
multicast (ASM), source-filtered multicast (SFM), and source-specific multicast (SSM). 
ASM model 
In the ASM model, any sender can send information to a multicast group as a multicast source, and 
numbers of receivers can join a multicast group identified by a group address and obtain multicast 
information addressed to that multicast group. In this model, receivers are not aware of the position of 
multicast sources in advance. However, they can join or leave the multicast group at any time. 
SFM model 
The SFM model is derived from the ASM. From the view of a sender, the two models have the same 
multicast membership architecture. 
The SFM model functionally extends the ASM model: In the SFM model, the upper layer software 
checks the source address of received multicast packets and permits or denies multicast traffic from 
specific sources. Therefore, receivers can receive the multicast data from only part of the multicast 
sources. From the view of a receiver, multicast sources are not all valid: they are filtered. 
SSM model 
In the practical life, users may be interested in the multicast data from only certain multicast sources. 
The SSM model provides a transmission service that allows users to specify the multicast sources they 
are interested in at the client side.  
The radical difference between the SSM model and the ASM model is that in the SSM model, receivers 
already know the locations of the multicast sources by some other means. In addition, the SSM model 
uses a multicast address range that is different from that of the ASM/SFM model, and dedicated 
multicast forwarding paths are established between receivers and the specified multicast sources.  
Multicast Architecture 
IP multicast addresses the following questions:  
Where should the multicast source transmit information to? (multicast addressing)  
What receivers exist on the network? (host registration)  
Where is the multicast source the receivers need to receive multicast data from? (multicast source 
discovery)  
How should information be transmitted to the receivers? (multicast routing) 
IP multicast falls in the scope of end-to-end service. The multicast architecture involves the following 
four parts:  
1)  Addressing mechanism: Information is sent from a multicast source to a group of receivers through 
a multicast address.