Инструкции По Установке для 3com S7906E

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1-7 
2)  Host registration: Receiver hosts are allowed to join and leave multicast groups dynamically. This 
mechanism is the basis for group membership management.  
3)  Multicast routing: A multicast distribution tree (namely a forwarding path tree for multicast data on 
the network) is constructed for delivering multicast data from a multicast source to receivers. 
4)  Multicast applications: A software system that supports multicast applications, such as video 
conferencing, must be installed on multicast sources and receiver hosts, and the TCP/IP stack 
must support reception and transmission of multicast data.  
Multicast Addresses 
To allow communication between multicast sources and multicast group members, network-layer 
multicast addresses, namely, multicast IP addresses must be provided. In addition, a technique must be 
available to map multicast IP addresses to link-layer multicast MAC addresses.  
IP multicast addresses 
1)  IPv4 multicast addresses 
Internet Assigned Numbers Authority (IANA) assigned the Class D address space (224.0.0.0 to 
239.255.255.255) for IPv4 multicast. The specific address blocks and usages are shown in 
.  
Table 1-2 Class D IP address blocks and description  
Address block 
Description 
224.0.0.0 to 224.0.0.255 
Reserved permanent group addresses. The IP address 
224.0.0.0 is reserved, and other IP addresses can be used 
by routing protocols and for topology searching, protocol 
maintenance, and so on. Common permanent group 
addresses are listed in 
. A packet destined for an 
address in this block will not be forwarded beyond the local 
subnet regardless of the Time to Live (TTL) value in the IP 
header.  
224.0.1.0 to 238.255.255.255 
Globally scoped group addresses. This block includes two 
types of designated group addresses: 
232.0.0.0/8: SSM group addresses, and 
233.0.0.0/8: Glop group addresses.  
239.0.0.0 to 239.255.255.255 
Administratively scoped multicast addresses. These 
addresses are considered to be locally rather than globally 
unique, and can be reused in domains administered by 
different organizations without causing conflicts. For details, 
refer to RFC 2365.  
 
  
The membership of a group is dynamic. Hosts can join or leave multicast groups at any time. 
“Glop” is a mechanism for assigning multicast addresses between different autonomous systems 
(ASs). By filling an AS number into the middle two bytes of 233.0.0.0, you get 255 multicast 
addresses for that AS. For more information, refer to RFC 2770.