354
C
HAPTER
13: IP M
ULTICAST
R
OUTING
Using IP Multicast
Traceroute
You can perform an IP multicast traceroute from the system management
interface. The ability to trace the path of a IP multicast group packet from
a source to a particular destination is desirable for troubleshooting
purposes.
Unlike unicast traceroute, IP multicast traceroute requires the ability for
routers to understand a special IGMP packet type and the related
processes.
Beginning a trace from an IP multicast source would be difficult because,
at forks in the network paths, there is no way to determine which
direction to take. You would have to flood the entire tree and wait for
responses (or the lack thereof) to find the path. Thus, a more efficient
approach is to start at the destination and travel backwards toward the
source, using the knowledge held by IP multicast routing protocols that
work by calculating previous hops back toward sources.
An IP multicast traceroute proceeds as follows:
1
At the destination node (your system), you specify a source and group
address.
2
The system sends a traceroute Query packet to the last-hop multicast
router (the upstream router for this source-group pair).
3
The last-hop router turns the Query packet into a Request packet by
adding a response data block containing its interface addresses and
packet statistics. It then forwards the Request packet via unicast to the
router that it believes is the previous hop for the given source-group pair.
4
Each previous hop router adds its response data to the end of the Request
packet, then forwards it via unicast to the next previous hop router.
5
Finally, the first-hop router — that is, the router that believes that the
source-group packets originate on one of its directly-attached
subnetworks — adds its data, changes the Request packet to a Response
packet, and sends the completed response back to the destination node
that issued the traceroute query.
6
You see a display that shows IP addresses of the interfaces that span from
your system back to the source that you specify. The display also shows
the number of hops back to those interfaces, the multicast routing
protocols used, and the amount of time it takes to reach each hop from
the receiver.
Summary of Contents for CoreBuilder 3500
Page 44: ...44 CHAPTER 2 MANAGEMENT ACCESS ...
Page 58: ...58 CHAPTER 3 SYSTEM PARAMETERS ...
Page 86: ...86 CHAPTER 5 ETHERNET ...
Page 112: ...112 CHAPTER 6 FIBER DISTRIBUTED DATA INTERFACE FDDI ...
Page 208: ...208 CHAPTER 9 VIRTUAL LANS ...
Page 256: ...256 CHAPTER 10 PACKET FILTERING ...
Page 330: ...330 CHAPTER 12 VIRTUAL ROUTER REDUNDANCY PROTOCOL VRRP ...
Page 356: ...356 CHAPTER 13 IP MULTICAST ROUTING ...
Page 418: ...418 CHAPTER 14 OPEN SHORTEST PATH FIRST OSPF ...
Page 519: ...RSVP 519 Figure 94 Sample RSVP Configuration Source station End stations Routers ...
Page 566: ...566 CHAPTER 18 DEVICE MONITORING ...
Page 572: ...572 APPENDIX A TECHNICAL SUPPORT ...
Page 592: ...592 INDEX ...