F3726, F3211, F3174, R5135, R3816-HP Firewalls and UTM Devices Appendix Protocol Reference-6PW100

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Neighbor discovery
PIM-SM uses a similar neighbor discovery mechanism as PIM-DM does. For more information, see
"Neighbor discovery."
DR election
PIM-SM also uses hello messages to elect a DR for a shared-media network (such as Ethernet). The
elected DR will be the only multicast forwarder on this shared-media network.
A DR must be elected in a shared-media network, no matter this network connects to multicast sources or
to receivers. The receiver-side DR sends join messages to the RP. The source-side DR sends register
messages to the RP.
A DR is elected on a shared-media subnet by means of comparison of the priorities and IP addresses
carried in hello messages. An elected DR is substantially meaningful to PIM-SM. PIM-DM itself does not
require a DR. However, if IGMPv1 runs on any shared-media network in a PIM-DM domain, a DR must
be elected to act as the IGMPv1 querier on that shared-media network.
IGMP must be enabled on a device that acts as a receiver-side DR before receivers attached to this device
can join multicast groups through this DR. For more information about IGMP, see "IGMP."
Figure 54 DR elec
tion
As shown in Figure 54, the DR election process is as follows:
1. Routers on the shared-media network send hello messages to one another. The hello messages
contain the router priority for DR election. The router with the highest DR priority will become the
DR.
2. In the case of a tie in the router priority, or if any router in the network does not support carrying
the DR-election priority in hello messages, the router with the highest IP address will win the DR
election.
3. When the DR fails, a timeout in receiving a hello message triggers a new DR election process
among the other routers.