Multicast Traffic Receipt Without Forwarding; Figure 15: Multicast Oif Mapping - Juniper JUNOSE 11.0.X MULTICAST ROUTING Configuration Manual

For e series broadband services routers - multicast routing configuration
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Chapter 5: Configuring IPv6 Multicast

Figure 15: Multicast OIF Mapping

One disadvantage to using multicast OIF mapping is that the multicast traffic bypasses
any QoS treatment that is applied to subscriber interfaces. Configuring QoS adjustment
resolves this problem. (See Parameter Definition Attributes for QoS Administrators
Overview for additional information about configuring QoS adjustment.) With QoS
adjustment configured, when a subscriber requests to receive a multicast stream (or,
more appropriately, when an OIF is added to the mroute), the router reduces the
unicast QoS bandwidth applied to the subscriber interface (that is, the join interface)
by the amount of bandwidth for that multicast stream.

Multicast Traffic Receipt Without Forwarding

In this case, the router is not given the responsibility of forwarding multicast streams.
Instead, the service provider arranges for the router to receive the multicast streams
so the router can detect the flow and perform QoS adjustment. An OIF map is installed
that maps the traffic streams to a loopback interface configured for MLD version
passive. This means that when the traffic is received, a null mroute is installed (that
is, an mroute with an empty OIF list) and the router applies the QoS adjustment to
the join interface. See Figure 16 on page 160.
NOTE: Ensure that PIM-SM (or any other upstream multicast protocol) is informed
of the group (or source-group) interest.
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Configuring Multicast QoS Adjustment

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