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Joining the Shared Tree

So far, this section on PIM-SM has explained the beginnings of the registration process, by which a router near the source of multicast packets registers with the RP. Before completing that discussion, however, the concept of the shared tree for a multicast group, also called the root-path tree (RPT), must be explained. As mentioned earlier, PIM-SM initially causes multicasts to be delivered in a two-step process: first, packets are sent from the source to the RP, and then th..

CB Marking Design Choices

The intent of CB Marking is to simplify the work required of other QoS tools by marking packets of the same class with the same QoS marking. For other QoS tools to take advantage of those markings, packets should generally be marked as close to the ingress point of the packet as possible. However,the earliest possible point may not be a trusted device. For instance, in Figure 14-5 (the figure upon which Examples 14-3 and 14-4 are based), Server1 could set its own DSCP and eve..

All of This Per VLAN!

As if the Spanning-Tree Protocol isn't exciting enough all by itself, it turns out that everything already discussed in the chapter actually occurs once per VLAN! In other words, Cisco uses one instance of STP per VLAN. This feature is generally referred to as PVST: per VLAN Spanning Tree. In other words, every VLAN can have a different Root Bridge and active topology. For example, VLAN 2 could look like part A of Figure 6-23, whereas VLAN 3 could look like part B. Figure 6..

PE-CE Communication via OSPF

You can use OSPF to exchange customer routing information between the CE and PE routers at each site. For this example, we will configure OSPF for the CE to PE IGP at Customer A's Sites 1 and 2, but not 3, so that we can show some of the idiosyncrasies of MP-BGP route redistribution. First we will configure the CE routers. We will use two OSPF network statements on the router at Site 1. The first, 192.168.1.0/24, allows this router to communicate with the PE router, while th..

Periodic Flooding

Although OSPF does not send routing updates on a periodic interval, as do distance vector protocols, OSPF does reflood each LSA every 30 minutes based on each LSA’s age variable. The router that creates the LSA sets this age to 0 (seconds). Each router then increments the age of its copy of each LSA over time. If 30 minutes pass with no changes to an LSA–meaning no other reason existed in that 30 minutes to cause a reflooding of the LSA–the owning router increments the ..

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