SMC Networks 1000BASE-X 用户手册

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页码 178
A
DVANCED
 T
OPICS
4-6
Connecting VLAN Groups
The switch supports intra-VLAN communication using wire-speed 
switching. However, if you have devices in separate VLANs that must 
communicate, and it is not practical to include these devices in a common 
VLAN, then the VLANs can be connected via a 
Layer 3 switch (such as the SMC6724L3) or a router.
Multicast Filtering
Multicasting sends data to a group of nodes instead of a single destination. 
The simplest way to implement multicasting is to broadcast data to all 
nodes on the network. However, such an approach wastes a lot of 
bandwidth if the target group is small compared to overall the broadcast 
domain. 
Since applications such as video conferencing and data sharing are more 
widely used today, efficient multicasting has become vital. A common 
approach is to use a group registration protocol that lets nodes join or 
leave multicast groups. A switch or router can then easily determine which 
ports contain group members and send data out to those ports only. This 
procedure is called multicast filtering. 
The purpose of multicast filtering is to optimize a switched network’s 
performance, so multicast packets will only be forwarded to those ports 
containing multicast group hosts or multicast routers/switches instead of 
flooding to all ports in the subnet (VLAN). The TigerStack 100 supports 
multicast filtering by passively monitoring IGMP Query and Report 
messages.
IGMP Snooping
A Layer 2 switch can passively snoop on IGMP Query and Report packets 
transferred between IP Multicast Routers/Switches and IP Multicast host 
groups to learn the IP Multicast group members. It simply monitors the 
IGMP packets passing through it, picks out the group registration