R3721-F3210-F3171-HP High-End Firewalls Network Management Configuration Guide-6PW101

Table Of Contents
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NOTE:
The
group-address
{
mask
|
mask-length
} parameter of the c-bsr group command can specify the
multicast groups the C-BSR serves, in the range of 239.0.0.0/8.
{ Configure C-BSRs for the global-scope zone
Perform the following configuration on the routers that you want to configure as C-BSRs in the
global-scope zone.
To configure a C-BSR for the global-scope zone:
Ste
p
Command Remarks
1. Enter system view. system-view N/A
2. Enter public network PIM view.
pim N/A
3. Configure a C-BSR for the
global-scope zone.
c-bsr global [ hash-length hash-length |
priority priority ] *
No C-BSRs are configured
for the global-scope zone
by default.
NOTE:
You can configure the hash mask length and C-BSR priority globally, in an admin-scope zone, and in the
global scope zone.
The values configured in the global scope zone or admin-scope zone have preference over the
g
lobal
values.
If you do not configure these parameters in the global scope zone or admin-scope zone, the
corresponding global values will be used.
For configuration of global C-BSR parameters, see "Configuring global C-BSR parameters."
Configuring multicast source registration
Within a PIM-SM domain, the source-side DR sends register messages to the RP, and these register
messages have different multicast source or group addresses. You can configure a filtering rule to filter
register messages so that the RP can serve specific multicast groups. If the filtering rule denies an (S, G)
entry, or the filtering rule does not define the action for this entry, the RP will send a register-stop message
to the DR to stop the registration process for the multicast data.
In view of information integrity of register messages in the transmission process, you can configure the
device to calculate the checksum based on the entire register messages. However, to reduce the
workload of encapsulating data in register messages and for the sake of interoperability, do not use this
method of checksum calculation.
When receivers stop receiving multicast data addressed to a certain multicast group through the RP (that
is, the RP stops serving the receivers of that multicast group), or when the RP starts receiving multicast
data from the multicast source along the SPT, the RP sends a register-stop message to the source-side DR.
After receiving this message, the DR stops sending register messages encapsulated with multicast data
and starts a register-stop timer. Before the register-stop timer expires, the DR sends a null register message
(a register message without encapsulated multicast data) to the RP. If the DR receives a register-stop
message during the register probe time, it will reset its register-stop timer. Otherwise, the DR starts
sending register messages with encapsulated data again when the register-stop timer expires.
The register-stop timer is set to a random value chosen uniformly from the interval (0.5 times
register_suppression_time, 1.5 times register_suppression_time) minus register_probe_time.