Some LAN Switches with IGMP Snooping Enabled Stop Forwarding Multicast
Packets on RRAS Startup

The information in this article applies to: 

*       Microsoft Windows 2000 Advanced Server

SUMMARY

Routers connected to LAN switches configured with IGMP snooping may have
problems when a Windows 2000 RRAS-capable server comes online or when
OSPF or RIP version 2 is enabled. 

MORE INFORMATION

Switches with IGMP snooping enabled have a feature that attempts to
determine which ports connect to devices that belong to a particular
multicast group. If the port does not connect to a device in the
multicast group, the switch does not forward packets destined to the
multicast group out that port. Some switches attempt to do this smart
multicast forwarding for all multicast destinations, while others do
this only for non-permanent groups (groups outside the range
224.0.0.1-224.0.0.255). Switches doing this for permanent groups, such
as the all-routers group 224.0.0.2, the OSPF multicast groups 224.0.0.5
and 224.0.0.6, and the RIP 2 multicast group 224.0.0.9, could cause
problems on the switched network. 

This behavior occurs if the switch has Cisco routers connected to it,
running Hot Standby Routing Protocol, OSPF, or RIP 2, and a Windows 2000
server is connected to the switch and initialized. Other routers may be
affected as well.

Before the server is brought online, the routers are communicating
through the switch using one or more of the above multicast addresses.
The routers never send IGMP join packets for these groups so the switch
never tries to parse which ports will receive the multicast packets.
When the server with RRAS comes online, it sends an IGMP join packet for
the all-routers multicast group (224.0.0.2), and for the OSPF and RIP 2
groups if the protocols are running. The switch sees the join message
and sends a membership query out all its ports to determine which ports
have devices that also belong to this group. The routers do not respond
to membership queries for these multicast groups. The switch then stops
sending packets destined to these multicast groups to the router's
ports, and effectively disables the routing protocol communication
between routers.

Hewlett-Packard (HP) and Nortel Networks (formerly Bay) switches operate
in this manner when IGMP snooping is enabled. Both switches have an
option for defining filters that enable them to always forward multicast
packets to all ports for specific groups. These filters must be enabled
to assure that the routers will continue functioning. Other switches
always forward all multicast packets for these groups to all ports
without requiring filters be enabled.

The IGMP join packets sent from the Windows 2000 server with RRAS can be
observed by monitoring the data sent by the server when it first
initializes. Without any RRAS configuration, the server sends the IGMP
join for the all-routers group (224.0.0.2). When RRAS is started and
OSPF is configured the server sends the join for the OSPF groups
224.0.0.5 and 224.0.0.6. When RIP 2 is configured, the server sends the
join for the RIP 2 group 224.0.0.9.




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