Reference Guide
20
Internet Group Management Protocol (IGMP)
Internet group management protocol (IGMP) is supported on the S4820T platform.
Multicast is premised on identifying many hosts by a single destination IP address; hosts represented by the same IP
address are a multicast group. IGMP is a Layer 3 multicast protocol that hosts use to join or leave 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
• Dell Networking operating system (FTOS) supports IGMP versions 1, 2, and 3 based on RFCs 1112, 2236, and
3376, respectively.
• FTOS does not support IGMP version 3 and versions 1 or 2 on the same subnet.
• IGMP on FTOS supports 95 interfaces on S4820T and an unlimited number of groups on all platforms.
• Dell Networking systems cannot serve as an IGMP host or an IGMP version 1 IGMP Querier.
• FTOS automatically enables IGMP on interfaces on which you enable a multicast routing protocol.
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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