User manual
Page 23-1
23 Multicast VLANs
Multicast VLANs enable you to control the flooding of multicast traffic in your network. For 
example, you can define a multicast VLAN for all users that want to receive CNN Newscasts or 
any other video feed or combination of feeds. 
You define the multicast traffic to be transmitted by specifying a multicast address. You define 
the recipients of the multicast traffic by specifying ports and/or specific 
MAC addresses. The 
members of a multicast VLAN consist of the ports specified to receive the multicast traffic and 
the ports to which MAC address recipients are connected. Instructions for creating multicast 
VLANs begin on page 23-4.
Note the difference between multicast 
VLANs and AutoTracker VLANs. In AutoTracker VLANs, 
devices are assigned to VLANs by examination of the frames that originate from those devices. 
The members of an AutoTracker VLAN consist of source devices that fit the VLAN’s policies 
and the ports to which those source devices are connected.
There are several differences between the configuration of multicast 
VLANs and the configura-
tion of AutoTracker VLANs. The following is a summary of points to note when configuring 
multicast VLANs:
• You can not configure routing for multicast 
VLANs. Multicast VLANs are independent broad-
cast domains for multicast traffic originating from a multicast address and transmitted to 
one or more recipients.
• Multicast 
VLANs allow three rules: Port, MAC Address, and multicast policy.
• There is not a default multicast 
VLAN. Therefore, you can define rules for all 32 available 
multicast VLANs. All ports (even those that eventually become part of a multicast VLAN) 
start off in the standard AutoTracker default VLAN #1, but they only get assigned to a multi-
cast VLAN if you explicitly assign them to one.
• All multicast 
VLANs include the multicast policy. This policy specifies the multicast address. 
You use the other two rules—Port and MAC Address—to define the destination of the 
multicast traffic.










