Chapter 10 Bridge Commands; Igmp Snooping; Bridge Port Numbers; Basic Commands - ZyXEL Communications IES-2000 User Manual

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This chapter discusses the bridge subsystem. It allows you to configure and monitor bridging, configure
The ALC1024 and SLC1024 support IEEE 802.1D transparent bridging; but not the static filtering feature or
spanning tree protocol. The bridge learns the source MAC addresses of sender hosts by inspecting incoming
Ethernet frames and recording the learned MAC addresses with their incoming port numbers into its filtering
database. Based on the database, the bridge forwards each incoming frame to its destination port.
10.1

IGMP Snooping

Traditionally, IP packets are transmitted in one of either two ways - Unicast (1 sender to 1 recipient) or Broadcast
(1 sender to everybody on the network). Multicast delivers IP packets to just a group of hosts on the network.
IGMP (Internet Group Multicast Protocol) is a session-layer protocol used to establish membership in a multicast
group - it is not used to carry user data. Refer to RFC 1112 and RFC 2236 for information on IGMP versions 1
and 2 respectively.
A layer-2 switch can passively snoop on IGMP Query, Report and Leave (IGMP version 2) packets transferred
between IP multicast routers/switches and IP multicast hosts to learn the IP multicast group membership. It checks
IGMP packets passing through it, picks out the group registration information, and configures multicasting
accordingly.
Without IGMP snooping, multicast traffic is treated in the same manner as broadcast traffic, that is, it is forwarded
to all ports. With IGMP snooping, group multicast traffic is only forwarded to ports that are members of that
group. IGMP Snooping generates no additional network traffic, allowing you to significantly reduce multicast
traffic passing through your switch.
10.2

Bridge Port Numbers

The bridge subsystem of the ALC1024 and SLC1024 define their own numbering convention for ports.
The bridge has a total of nine ports: bridge port 1 stands for the Ethernet uplink port, bridge port
2 stands for DSL port 1, bridge port 3 stands for DSL port 2, and so on.
Be sure you have clarified the relation between bridge ports and DSL ports.
10.3

Basic Commands

Bridge Commands
MAC filters, port-based VLANs and tagged frame functions of the line cards.
IES-2000/3000 User's Guide
Chapter 10
Bridge Commands
10-1

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