Multicast Filtering - Siemens RX1500 User Manual

Ruggedcom rox ii series
Hide thumbs Also See for RX1500:
Table of Contents

Advertisement

Chapter 6
Troubleshooting
Problem
Links are inaccessible, even when using
the Logical File Inclusion (LFI) protection
feature.
Section 6.3

Multicast Filtering

The following describes common problems related to multicast filtering.
Problem
When started, a multicast traffic feed is
always distributed to all members of the
VLAN.
Computers connected to the switch receive
multicast traffic, but not when they are
connected to a router.
The video stream at an end station is of poor
quality.
Multicast streams of some groups are not
forwarded properly. Some segments without
subscribers receive the traffic, while some
segments with subscribers do not.
Computers on the switch issue join requests,
but do not receive multicast streams from a
router.
Unable to connect or disconnect some
switch ports, and multicast goes everywhere.
Is IGMP broken?
822
Solution
two milliseconds to the next switch. If the link used is of high quality, then no pings should
be lost and the average round trip time should be small.
Make sure LFI is not enabled on the peer as well. If both sides of the link have LFI enabled,
then both sides will withhold link signal generation from each other.
Solution
Is IGMP enabled for the VLAN? Multicasts will be distributed to all members of the VLAN
unless IGMP is enabled.
Is the port used to connect the router included in the Router Ports list?
To determine whether the multicast stream is being delivered to the router, view the
statistics collected for switched Ethernet ports. For more information, refer to
"Viewing Switched Ethernet Port
Verify the traffic count transmitted to the router is the same as the traffic count received from
the multicasting source.
Video serving is a resource-intensive application. Because it uses isochronous workload,
data must be fed at a prescribed rate or end users will see glitches in the video. Networks
that carry data from the server to the client must be engineered to handle this heavy,
isochronous workload. Video streams can consume large amounts of bandwidth. Features
and capacity of both server and network (including routers, bridges, switches and interfaces)
impact the streams.
Do not exceed 60% of the maximum interface bandwidth. For example, if using a 10 Mbps
Ethernet, run a single multicasting source at no more than 6 Mbps, or two sources at 3
Mbps. It is important to consider these ports in the network design, as router ports will carry
the traffic of all multicast groups.
IMPORTANT!
Multicasting will introduce latency in all traffic on the network. Plan the network
carefully in order to account for capacity and latency concerns.
Make sure different multicast groups do not have multicast IP addresses that map to the
same multicast MAC address. The switch forwarding operation is MAC address-based and
will not work properly for several groups mapping to the same MAC address.
Is the multicast route running IGMP version 2? It must run IGMP version 2 in order for IGMP
Snooping to operate properly.
IGMP is not broken. This may in fact be proper switch behavior.
When the switch detects a change in the network topology through RSTP, it acts to avoid
loss of multicast traffic. If configured to do so, it starts forwarding all multicast traffic to all
ports that are not RSTP Edge ports (because they may potentially link to routers). This may
result in some undesired flooding of multicast traffic, which will stop after a few minutes.
However, it guarantees that all devices interested in the traffic will keep receiving it without
interruption.
The same behavior will be observed when the switch resets or when IGMP Snooping is
being disabled for the VLAN.
Statistics".
RUGGEDCOM ROX II
User Guide
Section 3.18.4,
Multicast Filtering

Hide quick links:

Advertisement

Table of Contents
loading

This manual is also suitable for:

Rx1501Rx1510Rx1511Rx1512

Table of Contents