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ccnpninja wrote: Hi folks, I read that there are IGMP Join, Leave and Query messages. However I read that CGMP has Join, Leave and Query messages too. Are they the same? thanks.
tech-airman wrote: ccnpninja, The key word in IGMP is "Internet" which is the key word in "Internet Protocol" or IP for short. IP is a Layer 3 protocol.
If care is not taken as to how IGMP snooping is implemented, a switch may have to intercept all Layer 2 multicast packets to identify IGMP packets.
When CGMP is first enabled on both the multicast router and switch, the router will send a CGMP Join message, informing the switch that a multicast router is now connected to it.
scheistermeister wrote: tech-airman wrote: ccnpninja, The key word in IGMP is "Internet" which is the key word in "Internet Protocol" or IP for short. IP is a Layer 3 protocol. But that does not mean that a switch HAS (although it should) to be a Layer 3 device to identify IGMP packets. Just thought your explanation could be potential confusing.
ccnpninja wrote: Are they the same?
ccnpninja wrote: I found an answer from a CCIE, IGMP has Join, Leave and Query. However, CGMP has only Join and Leave. And they are different. CGMP: When the router gets an IGMP Join (Report) message from a host wanting to join a multicast group, he sends a CGMP Join, along with the Group Destination Address (i.e. the MAC address of the multicast group) and the Client Destination Address (host's MAC). So the switch forwards the multicast traffic of that group to the appropriate port (by reading its CAM table). The same thing with CGMP Leave. The switch won't forward the unwanted multicast traffic out the "leaving" port, and still forwards it out the ports where there are hosts interested in it. HTH.
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