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IP Multicast

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IP Multicast Fang Yan CSEE, UMBC 10/14/04 topics Basics of multicasting MBone IPv4 routing protocols 6bone What is multicasting Application level one to many ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: IP Multicast


1
IP Multicast
  • Fang Yan
  • CSEE, UMBC
  • 10/14/04

2
topics
  • Basics of multicasting
  • MBone
  • IPv4 routing protocols
  • 6bone

3
What is multicasting
  • Application level one to many communication.
  • A single packet is addressed to all intended
    recipientshost group
  • The network replicates packets only as
    neededwhen paths diverge at a router

4
Why Multicasting
  • It is efficient
  • better bandwidth utilization
  • less host/router processing
  • quicker participation
  • Many applications send data to multiple
    receivers.
  • Streaming multimedia
  • Content delivery (meeting, lecture, speech)
  • Stock quotes, news
  • Database replication
  • Software distribution

5
B
Y
A
X
C
D
Z
E
Flow of data in multiple unicasting
6
B
Y
A
X
C
D
Z
E
Flow of data in multicasting
7
Basic components of IP multicasting
  • Definition of a multicast host group
  • Protocols for establishing and controlling
    multicast groups
  • Router infrastructure for distribution of
    multicast traffic
  • Application protocols and APIs that enable
    desktop computers and workstations to put
    multicasting to good use

8
multicast address
  • IPV4
  • 4 28 bits
  • class D
  • From 224.0.0.0 to 239.255.255.255
  • From 224.0.0.0 to 224.0.0.255 is reserved
  • Totally 228-256268 million addresses

1110 Multicast Group ID
9
Reserved address examples
  • 224.0.0.1 all hosts
  • 224.0.0.1 all multicast routers
  • 224.0.0.4 DVMRP routers
  • 224.0.0.5 OSPF routers
  • 224.0.0.6 OSPF designated routers
  • 224.0.0.22 IGMP

10
multicast address (cont.)
  • IPV6
  • 8 4 4 112
    bits
  • Support 4millionbillionbillionbillion addresses
  • Flag
  • Transit/permanent
  • Scope
  • 1 node-local
  • 2 link-local
  • 5 site-local (set by administrators of routers
    at the site)
  • 8 organization local (set by administrators of
    routers of the organization)
  • 14 global

11111111 flags scope Multicast Group ID
11
  • Ready to go?
  • Unfortunately, there is a problem
  • At the early 90s, the majority of the routers on
    the Internet don't know how to handle
    multicasting. Most routers are set up to move
    traditional IP unicast packets.
  • Router manufacturers have been reluctant to
    create equipment that can do multicasting until
    there is a proven need for such equipment. But,
    as you might expect, it's difficult for users to
    try out a technology until they have a way to use
    it. Without the right routers, there's no
    multicasting. Without multicasting, there won't
    be the right routers.
  • Solution?
  • MBone !

12
MBonea little bit history
  • Stands for Multicast Backbone
  • In 1992, some bright fellows on the Internet
    Engineering Task Force (IETF) decided that no one
    would do in hardware, they could do in software.
  • Many scientific conferences, scientific events,
    concerts were broadcast over MBone since then.
  • In 1997, the first ISPs started rolling out
    commercial services utilizing multicasting on the
    Internet.

13
MBonearchitecture
  • A virtual overlay network on top of the Internet.
  • Consists of multicast-capable islands connected
    by tunnels
  • Each island (typically a LAN or group of
    interconnected LANs) supports hardware multicast
    to its hosts.
  • Each island contains one or more special routers
    called mrouters (multicast routers)
  • Mrouters are often workstations running multicast
    routing daemon (mrouted)

14
mrouter
C
B
LAN
A
D
Multicast island
15
tunneling
  • A tunnel is a connection between two mrouters
    using "IP over IP".
  • Tunnel parameters
  • Threshold The minimum TTL required for a packet
    to be forwarded across this tunnel
  • Cost A metric used to compute routing
    distances
  • encapsulate MBone packets within IP packet and
    send as regular unicast packets to the
    destination mrouters IP address

16
Original packet
17
Encapsulated packet
18
Tunnel configure
  • Tunnel is configured manually
  • The administrator of the new island sends a
    message announcing its existence to the MBone
    mailing list.
  • The administrators of nearby sites then contact
    him to arrange to set up tunnels.
  • Existing tunnels may be reshuffled to take
    advantage of the new island to optimize the
    topology.

19
MBone (cont.)
  • Initially used DVMRP routing algorithm
  • Migrated toward PIM
  • Uses UDP protocol
  • Problems
  • Scalability
  • Flow control
  • Congestion control
  • Future
  • Universe support of multicast?

20
IGMPv1
  • Stands for Internet Group Management Protocol
  • Described in RFC 1112.
  • Manages multicast group membership
  • Runs between hosts and their immediate
    neighboring mrouter
  • Only two kinds of packets query and report
  • Packet format
  • 4 4 4 16 bits

21
IGMPv1 How to join a host group
  • Mrouter initiated
  • Periodically, mrouter sends out a Query packet to
    its island asking who is interested in which
    channel.
  • Hosts wishing to (continue to) receive one or
    more channels send back Report packet.
  • Each mrouter keeps a table of which channels it
    must put out into its LAN
  • Receiver initiated
  • When a host first joins a group, it immediately
    transmits Report message rather than waiting from
    the next Query from the mrouter.
  • The request may need to be forwarded up to a
    router thats already part of the host group
  • Reduce join latency

22
More IGMP
  • IGMPv2
  • Defined in RFC 2236
  • Adds an explicit Leave message
  • Routers can more easily determine when a group
    has no interested listeners on a LAN
  • IGMPv3
  • Defined in RFC 3376
  • Optimizes support for a single source of content
    for a multicast group (SSM)
  • Backward compatible

23
IPv4 multicast routing protocols
  • DVMRP (Distance Vector Multicast Routing
    Protocol)
  • MOSPF (Multicast Open Shortest Path First)
  • PIM-DM (Protocol Independent Multicast, Dense
    Mode)
  • PIM-SM (Protocol Independent Multicast, Sparse
    Mode)
  • CBT (Core-Based Tree)

24
distance vector routing
  • Dynamic routing algorithm
  • Each router maintain a table giving the best
    known distance to each destination and which line
    to use to get there.
  • These tables are updated by exchanging
    information with the neighbors periodically.
  • Problem
  • Count-to-infinity

25
link state shortest-path-first routing
  • Periodically, each router floods a link-state
    message, containing the routers identity and its
    associated connectivity information to each of
    its immediate neighbors.
  • Each router runs the shortest-path-first
    algorithm to determine the shortest path from
    itself to all the other routers.
  • Problem
  • Computation intensive

26
RPF
  • Stands for reverse path forwarding
  • Simple algorithm developed to avoid duplicate
    packets on multi-access links
  • RPF algorithm takes advantage of the IP routing
    table to compute a multicast tree for each
    source.
  • RPF check
  • When a multicast packet is received, note its
    source (S) and interface (I)
  • If I belongs to the shortest path from S,
    forward to all interfaces except I
  • If test in step 2 is false, drop the packet
  • Packet is never forwarded back out the RPF
    interface!

27
DVMRPexchange distance vectors
  • First multicast routing protocol ever deployed in
    the Internet
  • Each router maintains a multicast routing table
    by exchanging distance vector information among
    routers
  • Constructs a source tree for each group using
    reverse path forwarding
  • There is a designated forwarder in each subnet
  • Multiple routers on the same LAN select
    designated forwarder by lower metric or lower IP
    address (discover when exchanging metric info.)
  • Once tree is created, it is used to forward
    messages from source to receivers

28
DVMRPbroadcast prune
  • Flood multicast packets based on RPF (Reverse
    path forwarding) rule to all interested routers.
  • Leaf routers check and sends prune message to
    upstream router when no group member is on their
    network
  • Upstream router prune the interface with no
    dependent downstream router.
  • Graft message to create a new branch for late
    participants
  • Restart forwarding after prune lifetime (standard
    720 minutes)

29
DVMRP tables
  • Routing table
  • Source subnet the source of multicast datagrams
  • From-Gateway previous hop router leading back to
    source
  • Metric cost
  • TTL
  • InPort routers interface for incoming traffic
  • OutPort routers interface for outgoing traffic
  • Forwarding table
  • Source subnet the sub network sending multicast
    datagrams
  • Multicast group class D IP address
  • TTL
  • InPort parent interface, prune message
  • OutPort child interface to forward, prune
    message

30
DVMRP
  • Advantage
  • Relatively simple
  • Modest processing demands
  • Disadvantage
  • Convergence performance
  • Periodically flood multicast traffic to rebuild
    its trees scalability

31
MOSPF
  • Modified from OSPF
  • Suitable for multicasting within a single
    autonomous system (AS)
  • One router is selected as the designated router
    (DR)
  • DR floods Group-Membership Link State
    Advertisements (LSAs)
  • Each router maintains the up-to-date image of the
    topology of the entire network
  • Each router floods its local state through the AS
  • Source-rooted Shortest path tree for each source
    network, destination group pair
  • Source-rooted SPT calculated at each router
  • Based on Link-State database
  • Provides the best route to any destination in AS
  • Pruned SPT - Group membership LSAs

32
MOSPF
  • Each router makes its forwarding decision based
    on the contents of its forwarding cache.
  • Forwarding cache is build from the source-based
    shortest-path tree for each (source, group) pair
    and the routers local group database
  • Forwarding cache entry
  • Destination
  • Source
  • Upstream receive from
  • Downstream forward to
  • TTL
  • Advantage
  • Adapt rapidly to changes in group membership
  • Interoperate with OSPFused to forward normal
    unicast IP traffic
  • Disadvantage
  • Computationally intensive
  • Not well-suited for handling sparse mode

33
PIM-DM
  • Similar to DVMRP
  • Floods multicasts out of all interfaces except
    the source interface
  • Uses RPM
  • Prune message to eliminate unneeded branches
  • Protocol-independent
  • Needs to establish its own router-to-router
    dialogs

34
PIM-DM Assert Mechanism
  • Multiple routers are active on the same link
  • Routers sends PIM assert messages
  • Compare distance and metric values
  • Router with best route to source wins
  • If metric distance equal, highest IP address
    wins
  • Losing router stops sending (prunes interface)

35
PIM-SM
  • Designed to provide efficient communication
    between members of sparsely distributed groups
  • Rendezvous point (RP) are used by senders to
    announce their existence and by receivers to
    learn about new senders of a group
  • Requires host group members explicitly join a
    delivery tree by transmitting Join message
  • One set of RPs per sparse-mode domain, not per
    group.
  • Each group has precisely one RP at any given
    time.
  • DR sends Join/Prune messages toward the RP and
    maintain the active RP

36
PIM-SM (cont.)
  • Allows routers to create a source-based SPT on
    behalf of their attacked receivers
  • Reduce delay
  • Reduce concentration of traffic on RP-tree
  • Advantages
  • Less traffic
  • disadvantages
  • Bottle-neck at an RP router
  • Single point of failure

37
PIM-SMjoining
  • DR receives IGMP Report message from receiver
  • DR creates a multicast forwarding entry for the
    (,G) pair and transmits a unicast Join message
    toward the primary RP for this group
  • Intermediate router forwards the Join message,
    creating a forwarding entry for the (,F) pair if
    not exists.

Source (S)
Designated Router
Rendezvous Point (RP) for group G
Host (receiver)
Join
Join
38
PIM-SMsending
  • DR encapsulates the initial multicast packets in
    a Register packet and sends them toward the
    primary RP
  • The active RP transmits Join messages back toward
    the sources DR.
  • Intermediate routers create a new (S, G) pair.
  • When source gets a Join, it sends further packets
    without encapsulation

39
CBT
  • Construct a single tree shared by a Group
  • Protocol independent
  • Core router equivalent to RP
  • Receiver cannot switch from RP-tree to SPT
  • CBT state bi-directional
  • data flows in either direction along the branch
  • Advantage
  • Less traffic
  • Better scalability
  • Disadvantage
  • Bottleneck at CR
  • Single point failure

40
CBT
  • Host sends IGMP report to Join a group
  • JOIN-Request sent towards the core router
  • JOIN-Request is explicitly acked using JOIN-ACK
    by core or on-tree router
  • Intermediate routers set up Transient state
  • ltGroup, Incoming interface, Outgoing interfacegt
  • Transient state converted to Active state by
    JOIN-ACK
  • Bi-directional state
  • Keep-alive mechanismCBT Echo protocol
  • Echo-Request
  • Each on-tree router is responsible for
    maintaining its Upstream link
  • Sent to the Upstream router
  • Carries a list of groups for which the upstream
    router is the parent
  • Echo-Reply
  • From the parent with the list of groups attached
    to the child interface

41
Comparison
42
Inter-Domain Routing
  • Hierarchical routing
  • HDVMPR
  • HPIM
  • M-BGP (Multicast Border Gateway Protocol)
  • MSDP (Multicast Source Discovery Protocol)
  • Connect multiple PIM-SM domains together

43
6bone
  • Stands fro IPv6 backbone
  • an IPv6 test bed to assist in the evolution and
    deployment of IPv6
  • The network became a reality in March 1996
  • started as a virtual network (using IPv6 over
    IPv4 tunneling/encapsulation) operating over the
    IPv4-based Internet to support IPv6 transport
  • slowly migrating to native links for IPv6
    transport
  • Now 1478 sites from 60 countries

44
6bone hierarchy
  • The 6Bone network is organized in three
    hierarchical layers
  • the core backbone layer
  • made up of a mesh of IPv6 over IPv4 tunnels which
    connect only the backbone nodes
  • routing is based on BGP4 (Border Gateway
    Protocol version 4 extended to support IPv6) (RFC
    2858)
  • the transit node layer
  • connected to one or more backbone nodes
  • provide transit service to the leaf nodes
  • Routing outside of the backbone is mainly static
  • the peripheral or leaf node layer.

45
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46
6bone addressing
  • based on the format established for IPv6 unicast
    addresses (RFC 2073)
  • backbone nodes act as experimental TLAs (Top
    Level Aggregators) called pseudo-TLA
  • responsible for assigning IPv6 addresses to nodes
    belonging to lower hierarchical levels which are
    configured as their "clients".
  • The entire 6Bone network is identified by a
    16-bit prefix assigned directly by IANA
  • each backbone node is assigned a 24- or 28-bit
    long prefix

47
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48
6bone future
  • Will stay in place until on longer needed
  • excellent place for an ISP to get early
    experience before going into production

49
  • Thank you !
  • question?

50
  • References
  • IP Multicasting by Dave Kosiur
  • Multimedia communications by Fred Halsall
  • Computer Networks by Andrew S. Tanenbaum
  • http//www.6bone.net
  • http//www.savetz.com/mbone/
  • http//www.juniper.net/techpubs/software/junos/jun
    os60/swconfig60-multicast/html/swconfig60-multicas
    tTOC.html
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