Administrator Guide

Internet Group Management Protocol (IGMP)
Internet group management protocol (IGMP) is a Layer 3 multicast protocol that hosts use to join or leave a multicast group.
Multicast is premised on identifying many hosts by a single destination IP address; hosts represented by the same IP address are a
multicast group. Multicast routing protocols (such as protocol-independent multicast [PIM]) use the information in IGMP messages to
discover which groups are active and to populate the multicast routing table.
IGMP Implementation Information
The Dell Networking OS supports IGMP versions 1, 2, and 3 based on RFCs 1112, 2236, and 3376, respectively.
The system does not support IGMP version 3 and versions 1 or 2 on the same subnet.
Dell Networking switches cannot serve as an IGMP host or an IGMP version 1 IGMP Querier.
The system automatically enables IGMP on interfaces on which you enable a multicast routing protocol.
Topics:
IGMP Protocol Overview
Configure IGMP
Viewing IGMP Enabled Interfaces
Selecting an IGMP Version
Viewing IGMP Groups
Enabling IGMP Immediate-Leave
IGMP Snooping
Fast Convergence after MSTP Topology Changes
Designating a Multicast Router Interface
IGMP Protocol Overview
IGMP has three versions. Version 3 obsoletes and is backwards-compatible with version 2; version 2 obsoletes version 1.
IGMP Version 2
IGMP version 2 improves on version 1 by specifying IGMP Leave messages, which allows hosts to notify routers that they no longer care
about traffic for a particular group.
Leave messages reduce the amount of time that the router takes to stop forwarding traffic for a group to a subnet (leave latency) after
the last host leaves the group. In version 1 hosts quietly leave groups, and the router waits for a query response timer several times the
value of the query interval to expire before it stops forwarding traffic.
To receive multicast traffic from a particular source, a host must join the multicast group to which the source is sending traffic. A host
that is a member of a group is called a receiver. A host may join many groups, and may join or leave any group at any time. A host joins and
leaves a multicast group by sending an IGMP message to its IGMP Querier. The querier is the router that surveys a subnet for multicast
receivers and processes survey responses to populate the multicast routing table.
IGMP messages are encapsulated in IP packets, as shown in the following illustration.
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380 Internet Group Management Protocol (IGMP)