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Understanding Multicast Vlan Registration - Cisco Catalyst 3550 series Software Configuration Manual

Multilayer switch
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Chapter 20
Configuring IGMP Snooping and MVR
Table 20-4 Commands for Displaying IGMP Snooping Information (continued)
Command
show ip igmp snooping querier [vlan vlad-id]
show mac address-table multicast [vlan vlan-id]
[user | igmp-snooping] [count]
For more information about the keywords and options in these commands, refer to the command
reference for this release.
For examples of output from the commands in
release.

Understanding Multicast VLAN Registration

Multicast VLAN Registration (MVR) is designed for applications using wide-scale deployment of
multicast traffic across an Ethernet ring-based service provider network (for example, the broadcast of
multiple television channels over a service-provider network). MVR allows a subscriber on a port to
subscribe and unsubscribe to a multicast stream on the network-wide multicast VLAN. It allows the
single multicast VLAN to be shared in the network while subscribers remain in separate VLANs. MVR
provides the ability to continuously send multicast streams in the multicast VLAN, but to isolate the
streams from the subscriber VLANs for bandwidth and security reasons.
MVR assumes that subscriber ports subscribe and unsubscribe (join and leave) these multicast streams
by sending out IGMP join and leave messages. These messages can originate from an IGMP
version-2-compatible host with an Ethernet connection. Although MVR operates on the underlying
mechanism of IGMP snooping, the two features operate independently of each other. One can be enabled
or disabled without affecting the behavior of the other feature. However, if IGMP snooping and MVR
are both enabled, MVR reacts only to join and leave messages from multicast groups configured under
MVR. Join and leave messages from all other multicast groups are managed by IGMP snooping.
The switch CPU identifies the MVR IP multicast streams and their associated MAC addresses in the
switch forwarding table, intercepts the IGMP messages, and modifies the forwarding table to include or
remove the subscriber as a receiver of the multicast stream, even though the receivers might be in a
different VLAN from the source. This forwarding behavior selectively allows traffic to cross between
different VLANs.
The switch has these modes of MVR operation: dynamic and compatible.
78-11194-09
When operating in MVR dynamic mode, the switch performs standard IGMP snooping. IGMP
information packets are sent to the switch CPU, but multicast data packets are not sent to the CPU.
Dynamic mode allows the multicast router to run normally because the switch sends the IGMP join
messages to the router, and the router forwards multicast streams for a particular group to an
Purpose
Display information about the IGMP version that an interface supports.
(Optional) Enter vlan vlan-id to display information for a single VLAN.
Display the Layer 2 MAC address table entries for a VLAN. The
keywords are all optional and limit the display as shown:
vlan vlan-id—Displays only the specified multicast group VLAN.
user—Displays only the user-configured multicast entries.
igmp-snooping—Displays only entries learned through IGMP
snooping.
count—Displays only the total number of entries for the selected
criteria, not the actual entries.
Table
20-4, refer to the command reference for this
Catalyst 3550 Multilayer Switch Software Configuration Guide
Understanding Multicast VLAN Registration
20-13

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