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jovan88 wrote: » Can anyone explain to me why a network running PIM Dense mode, will still have a (*, G) entry in its multicast routing table? What is the purpose of this? Wouldn't all traffic be using the (S,G) entries? Multicast is really one of those areas which has me lost at times.
kryolla wrote: » Yes you are correct in that all traffic will use S,G entr. The *,G doesnt really serve any purpose in my opinion besides tell you what interfaces have pim enabled. The DR on the segment will create *,G entry wihen it receives an IGMP join and I also read somewhere that the *,G entry is a parent entry to S,G but S,G entry will tell you everything you need to know. *,G entry or shared tree is only used by the router for sparse mode. (*, 233.3.3.3), 00:01:15/stopped, RP 0.0.0.0, flags: D Incoming interface: Null, RPF nbr 0.0.0.0 Outgoing interface list: FastEthernet0/0, Forward/Dense, 00:01:15/00:00:00 Serial0/1, Forward/Dense, 00:01:15/00:00:00 (155.1.45.4, 233.3.3.3), 00:01:15/00:01:53, flags: T Incoming interface: Serial0/1, RPF nbr 0.0.0.0 Outgoing interface list: FastEthernet0/0, Forward/Dense, 00:01:16/00:00:00 The S,G entry says the source is coming in s0/1 and you have a receiver downstream on fa0/0 no RPF neighbor due to the source is off this router here is the downstream neighbor (*, 233.3.3.3), 00:08:08/stopped, RP 0.0.0.0, flags: DCL Incoming interface: Null, RPF nbr 0.0.0.0 Outgoing interface list: Vlan10, Forward/Dense, 00:08:08/00:00:00 Vlan58, Forward/Dense, 00:08:08/00:00:00 (155.1.45.4, 233.3.3.3), 00:00:19/00:02:49, flags: LT Incoming interface: Vlan58, RPF nbr 155.1.58.5 Outgoing interface list: Vlan10, Forward/Dense, 00:00:20/00:00:00, H The only difference is the RPF neighbor.
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