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C1 IGMPv3 backward compatibility with IGMPv1 and IGMPv2 is not
implemented. See RFC 3376, 7.3. Multicast Router Behavior. That's
because only Source-Specific Multicast is currently targeted.
C2 IGMPv3 support for forwarding any-source groups is not
implemented. Traffic for groups in mode EXCLUDE {empty} won't be
forwarded. See RFC 3376, 6.3. Source-Specific Forwarding
Rules. That's because only Source-Specific Multicast is currently
targeted.
C3 Load Splitting of IP Multicast Traffic over ECMP is not supported.
See also: RFC 2991
Multipath Issues in Unicast and Multicast Next-Hop Selection
http://www.rfc-editor.org/rfc/rfc2991.txt
C4 IPSec AH authentication is not supported (RFC 4601:
6.3. Authentication Using IPsec).
C5 PIM support is limited to SSM mode as defined in section 4.8.2
(PIM-SSM-Only Routers) of RFC4601. That's because only
Source-Specific Multicast is currently targeted.
C6 PIM implementation currently does not support IPv6. PIM-SSM
requires IGMPv3 for IPv4 and MLDv2 for IPv6. MLDv2 is currently
missing. See also CAVEAT C9.
C7 (S,G) Assert state machine (RFC 4601, section 4.6.1) is not
implemented. See also TODO T6. See also CAVEAT C10.
C8 It is not possible to disable join suppression in order to
explicitly track the join membership of individual downstream
routers.
- IGMPv3 Explicit Membership Tracking is not supported.
When explicit tracking is enabled on a router, the router can
individually track the Internet Group Management Protocol (IGMP)
membership state of all reporting hosts. This feature allows the
router to achieve minimal leave latencies when hosts leave a
multicast group or channel. Example:
conf t
interface eth0
ip igmp explicit-tracking
C9 Only IPv4 Address Family (number=1) is supported in the PIM Address
Family field.
See also RFC 4601: 5.1. PIM Address Family
See also CAVEAT C6.
See also http://www.iana.org/assignments/address-family-numbers
C10 FIXED Assert metric depends on metric_preference and
route_metric. Those parameters should be fetched from RIB
(zebra). See also pim_rpf.c, pim_rpf_update().
C11 SSM Mapping is not supported
SSM Mapping Overview:
SSM mapping introduces a means for the last hop router to discover
sources sending to groups. When SSM mapping is configured, if a
router receives an IGMPv1 or IGMPv2 membership report for a
particular group G, the router translates this report into one or
more (S, G) channel memberships for the well-known sources
associated with this group.
When the router receives an IGMPv1 or IGMPv2 membership report for
a group G, the router uses SSM mapping to determine one or more
source IP addresses for the group G. SSM mapping then translates
the membership report as an IGMPv3 report INCLUDE (G, [S1, G],
[S2, G]...[Sn, G] and continues as if it had received an IGMPv3
report. The router then sends out PIM joins toward (S1, G) to (Sn,
G) and continues to be joined to these groups as long as it
continues to receive the IGMPv1 or IGMPv2 membership reports and
as long as the SSM mapping for the group remains the same. SSM
mapping, thus, enables you to leverage SSM for video delivery to
legacy STBs that do not support IGMPv3 or for applications that do
not take advantage of the IGMPv3 host stack.
SSM mapping enables the last hop router to determine the source
addresses either by a statically configured table on the router or
by consulting a DNS server. When the statically configured table
is changed, or when the DNS mapping changes, the router will leave
the current sources associated with the joined groups.
C12 MRIB for incongruent unicast/multicast topologies is not supported.
RPF mechanism currently just looks up the information in the
unicast routing table.
See also:
RFC5110: 2.2.3. Issue: Overlapping Unicast/Multicast Topology
Sometimes, multicast RPF mechanisms first look up the multicast
routing table, or M-RIB ("topology database") with a longest
prefix match algorithm, and if they find any entry (including a
default route), that is used; if no match is found, the unicast
routing table is used instead.
C13 Can't detect change of primary address before the actual change.
Possible approach is to craft old interface address into ip source
address by using raw ip socket.
See also:
RFC 4601: 4.3.1. Sending Hello Messages
Before an interface goes down or changes primary IP address, a
Hello message with a zero HoldTime should be sent immediately
(with the old IP address if the IP address changed).
See also pim_sock_delete().
C14 Detection of interface primary address changes may fail when there
are multiple addresses.
See also TODO T32.
C15 Changes in interface secondary address list are not immediately
detected.
See also TODO T31.
C16 AMT Draft (mboned-auto-multicast) is not supported.
AMT = Automatic IP Multicast Without Explicit Tunnels
See also:
Draft
http://tools.ietf.org/html/draft-ietf-mboned-auto-multicast
http://tools.ietf.org/html/draft-ietf-mboned-auto-multicast-09
AMT gateway implementation for Linux
http://cs.utdallas.edu/amt/
AMT for Streaming (IPTV) on Global IP Multicast by Greg Shepherd (Cisco)
http://nznog.miniconf.org/nznog-2008-sysadmin-miniconf-greg-shepherd-iptv.pdf
C17 SNMP / RFC 5060 (PIM MIB) is not supported.
-x-