RFC1112

From RFC-Wiki
Revision as of 22:51, 22 September 2020 by Admin (talk | contribs)




Network Working Group S. Deering Request for Comments: 1112 Stanford University Obsoletes: RFCs 988, 1054 August 1989


                 Host Extensions for IP Multicasting

1. STATUS OF THIS MEMO

  This memo specifies the extensions required of a host implementation
  of the Internet Protocol (IP) to support multicasting.  It is the
  recommended standard for IP multicasting in the Internet.
  Distribution of this memo is unlimited.

2. INTRODUCTION

  IP multicasting is the transmission of an IP datagram to a "host
  group", a set of zero or more hosts identified by a single IP
  destination address.  A multicast datagram is delivered to all
  members of its destination host group with the same "best-efforts"
  reliability as regular unicast IP datagrams, i.e., the datagram is
  not guaranteed to arrive intact at all members of the destination
  group or in the same order relative to other datagrams.
  The membership of a host group is dynamic; that is, hosts may join
  and leave groups at any time.  There is no restriction on the
  location or number of members in a host group.  A host may be a
  member of more than one group at a time.  A host need not be a member
  of a group to send datagrams to it.
  A host group may be permanent or transient.  A permanent group has a
  well-known, administratively assigned IP address.  It is the address,
  not the membership of the group, that is permanent; at any time a
  permanent group may have any number of members, even zero.  Those IP
  multicast addresses that are not reserved for permanent groups are
  available for dynamic assignment to transient groups which exist only
  as long as they have members.
  Internetwork forwarding of IP multicast datagrams is handled by
  "multicast routers" which may be co-resident with, or separate from,
  internet gateways.  A host transmits an IP multicast datagram as a
  local network multicast which reaches all immediately-neighboring
  members of the destination host group.  If the datagram has an IP
  time-to-live greater than 1, the multicast router(s) attached to the
  local network take responsibility for forwarding it towards all other
  networks that have members of the destination group.  On those other
  member networks that are reachable within the IP time-to-live, an
  attached multicast router completes delivery by transmitting the


Deering [Page 1]

RFC 1112 Host Extensions for IP Multicasting August 1989


  datagram as a local multicast.
  This memo specifies the extensions required of a host IP
  implementation to support IP multicasting, where a "host" is any
  internet host or gateway other than those acting as multicast
  routers.  The algorithms and protocols used within and between
  multicast routers are transparent to hosts and will be specified in
  separate documents.  This memo also does not specify how local
  network multicasting is accomplished for all types of network,
  although it does specify the required service interface to an
  arbitrary local network and gives an Ethernet specification as an
  example.  Specifications for other types of network will be the
  subject of future memos.

3. LEVELS OF CONFORMANCE

  There are three levels of conformance to this specification:
     Level 0: no support for IP multicasting.
  There is, at this time, no requirement that all IP implementations
  support IP multicasting.  Level 0 hosts will, in general, be
  unaffected by multicast activity.  The only exception arises on some
  types of local network, where the presence of level 1 or 2 hosts may
  cause misdelivery of multicast IP datagrams to level 0 hosts.  Such
  datagrams can easily be identified by the presence of a class D IP
  address in their destination address field; they should be quietly
  discarded by hosts that do not support IP multicasting.  Class D
  addresses are described in section 4 of this memo.
     Level 1: support for sending but not receiving multicast IP
     datagrams.
  Level 1 allows a host to partake of some multicast-based services,
  such as resource location or status reporting, but it does not allow
  a host to join any host groups.  An IP implementation may be upgraded
  from level 0 to level 1 very easily and with little new code.  Only
  sections 4, 5, and 6 of this memo are applicable to level 1
  implementations.
     Level 2: full support for IP multicasting.
  Level 2 allows a host to join and leave host groups, as well as send
  IP datagrams to host groups.  It requires implementation of the
  Internet Group Management Protocol (IGMP) and extension of the IP and
  local network service interfaces within the host.  All of the
  following sections of this memo are applicable to level 2
  implementations.


Deering [Page 2]

RFC 1112 Host Extensions for IP Multicasting August 1989


4. HOST GROUP ADDRESSES

  Host groups are identified by class D IP addresses, i.e., those with
  "1110" as their high-order four bits.  Class E IP addresses, i.e.,
  those with "1111" as their high-order four bits, are reserved for
  future addressing modes.
  In Internet standard "dotted decimal" notation, host group addresses
  range from 224.0.0.0 to 239.255.255.255.  The address 224.0.0.0 is
  guaranteed not to be assigned to any group, and 224.0.0.1 is assigned
  to the permanent group of all IP hosts (including gateways).  This is
  used to address all multicast hosts on the directly connected
  network.  There is no multicast address (or any other IP address) for
  all hosts on the total Internet.  The addresses of other well-known,
  permanent groups are to be published in "Assigned Numbers".
  Appendix II contains some background discussion of several issues
  related to host group addresses.

















Deering [Page 3]

RFC 1112 Host Extensions for IP Multicasting August 1989


5. MODEL OF A HOST IP IMPLEMENTATION

  The multicast extensions to a host IP implementation are specified in
  terms of the layered model illustrated below.  In this model, ICMP
  and (for level 2 hosts) IGMP are considered to be implemented within
  the IP module, and the mapping of IP addresses to local network
  addresses is considered to be the responsibility of local network
  modules.  This model is for expository purposes only, and should not
  be construed as constraining an actual implementation.
        |                                                          |
        |              Upper-Layer Protocol Modules                |
        |__________________________________________________________|
     --------------------- IP Service Interface -----------------------
         __________________________________________________________
        |                            |              |              |
        |                            |     ICMP     |     IGMP     |
        |             IP             |______________|______________|
        |           Module                                         |
        |                                                          |
        |__________________________________________________________|
     ---------------- Local Network Service Interface -----------------
         __________________________________________________________
        |                            |                             |
        |           Local            | IP-to-local address mapping |
        |          Network           |         (e.g., ARP)         |
        |          Modules           |_____________________________|
        |      (e.g., Ethernet)                                    |
        |                                                          |
  To provide level 1 multicasting, a host IP implementation must
  support the transmission of multicast IP datagrams.  To provide level
  2 multicasting, a host must also support the reception of multicast
  IP datagrams.  Each of these two new services is described in a
  separate section, below.  For each service, extensions are specified
  for the IP service interface, the IP module, the local network
  service interface, and an Ethernet local network module.  Extensions
  to local network modules other than Ethernet are mentioned briefly,
  but are not specified in detail.






Deering [Page 4]

RFC 1112 Host Extensions for IP Multicasting August 1989


6. SENDING MULTICAST IP DATAGRAMS

6.1. Extensions to the IP Service Interface

  Multicast IP datagrams are sent using the same "Send IP" operation
  used to send unicast IP datagrams; an upper-layer protocol module
  merely specifies an IP host group address, rather than an individual
  IP address, as the destination.  However, a number of extensions may
  be necessary or desirable.
  First, the service interface should provide a way for the upper-layer
  protocol to specify the IP time-to-live of an outgoing multicast
  datagram, if such a capability does not already exist.  If the
  upper-layer protocol chooses not to specify a time-to-live, it should
  default to 1 for all multicast IP datagrams, so that an explicit
  choice is required to multicast beyond a single network.
  Second, for hosts that may be attached to more than one network, the
  service interface should provide a way for the upper-layer protocol
  to identify which network interface is be used for the multicast
  transmission.  Only one interface is used for the initial
  transmission; multicast routers are responsible for forwarding to any
  other networks, if necessary.  If the upper-layer protocol chooses
  not to identify an outgoing interface, a default interface should be
  used, preferably under the control of system management.
  Third (level 2 implementations only), for the case in which the host
  is itself a member of a group to which a datagram is being sent, the
  service interface should provide a way for the upper-layer protocol
  to inhibit local delivery of the datagram; by default, a copy of the
  datagram is looped back.  This is a performance optimization for
  upper-layer protocols that restrict the membership of a group to one
  process per host (such as a routing protocol), or that handle
  loopback of group communication at a higher layer (such as a
  multicast transport protocol).

6.2. Extensions to the IP Module

  To support the sending of multicast IP datagrams, the IP module must
  be extended to recognize IP host group addresses when routing
  outgoing datagrams.  Most IP implementations include the following
  logic:
       if IP-destination is on the same local network,
          send datagram locally to IP-destination
       else
          send datagram locally to GatewayTo( IP-destination )



Deering [Page 5]

RFC 1112 Host Extensions for IP Multicasting August 1989


  To allow multicast transmissions, the routing logic must be changed
  to:
       if IP-destination is on the same local network
       or IP-destination is a host group,
          send datagram locally to IP-destination
       else
          send datagram locally to GatewayTo( IP-destination )


  If the sending host is itself a member of the destination group on
  the outgoing interface, a copy of the outgoing datagram must be
  looped-back for local delivery, unless inhibited by the sender.
  (Level 2 implementations only.)
  The IP source address of the outgoing datagram must be one of the
  individual addresses corresponding to the outgoing interface.
  A host group address must never be placed in the source address field
  or anywhere in a source route or record route option of an outgoing
  IP datagram.

6.3. Extensions to the Local Network Service Interface

  No change to the local network service interface is required to
  support the sending of multicast IP datagrams.  The IP module merely
  specifies an IP host group destination, rather than an individual IP
  destination, when it invokes the existing "Send Local" operation.

6.4. Extensions to an Ethernet Local Network Module

  The Ethernet directly supports the sending of local multicast packets
  by allowing multicast addresses in the destination field of Ethernet
  packets.  All that is needed to support the sending of multicast IP
  datagrams is a procedure for mapping IP host group addresses to
  Ethernet multicast addresses.
  An IP host group address is mapped to an Ethernet multicast address
  by placing the low-order 23-bits of the IP address into the low-order
  23 bits of the Ethernet multicast address 01-00-5E-00-00-00 (hex).
  Because there are 28 significant bits in an IP host group address,
  more than one host group address may map to the same Ethernet
  multicast address.

6.5. Extensions to Local Network Modules other than Ethernet

  Other networks that directly support multicasting, such as rings or
  buses conforming to the IEEE 802.2 standard, may be handled the same


Deering [Page 6]

RFC 1112 Host Extensions for IP Multicasting August 1989


  way as Ethernet for the purpose of sending multicast IP datagrams.
  For a network that supports broadcast but not multicast, such as the
  Experimental Ethernet, all IP host group addresses may be mapped to a
  single local broadcast address (at the cost of increased overhead on
  all local hosts).  For a point-to-point link joining two hosts (or a
  host and a multicast router), multicasts should be transmitted
  exactly like unicasts.  For a store-and-forward network like the
  ARPANET or a public X.25 network, all IP host group addresses might
  be mapped to the well-known local address of an IP multicast router;
  a router on such a network would take responsibility for completing
  multicast delivery within the network as well as among networks.

7. RECEIVING MULTICAST IP DATAGRAMS

7.1. Extensions to the IP Service Interface

  Incoming multicast IP datagrams are received by upper-layer protocol
  modules using the same "Receive IP" operation as normal, unicast
  datagrams.  Selection of a destination upper-layer protocol is based
  on the protocol field in the IP header, regardless of the destination
  IP address.  However, before any datagrams destined to a particular
  group can be received, an upper-layer protocol must ask the IP module
  to join that group.  Thus, the IP service interface must be extended
  to provide two new operations:
                JoinHostGroup  ( group-address, interface )
                LeaveHostGroup ( group-address, interface )
  The JoinHostGroup operation requests that this host become a member
  of the host group identified by "group-address" on the given network
  interface.  The LeaveGroup operation requests that this host give up
  its membership in the host group identified by "group-address" on the
  given network interface.  The interface argument may be omitted on
  hosts that support only one interface.  For hosts that may be
  attached to more than one network, the upper-layer protocol may
  choose to leave the interface unspecified, in which case the request
  will apply to the default interface for sending multicast datagrams
  (see section 6.1).
  It is permissible to join the same group on more than one interface,
  in which case duplicate multicast datagrams may be received.  It is
  also permissible for more than one upper-layer protocol to request
  membership in the same group.
  Both operations should return immediately (i.e., they are non-
  blocking operations), indicating success or failure.  Either
  operation may fail due to an invalid group address or interface


Deering [Page 7]

RFC 1112 Host Extensions for IP Multicasting August 1989


  identifier.  JoinHostGroup may fail due to lack of local resources.
  LeaveHostGroup may fail because the host does not belong to the given
  group on the given interface.  LeaveHostGroup may succeed, but the
  membership persist, if more than one upper-layer protocol has
  requested membership in the same group.

7.2. Extensions to the IP Module

  To support the reception of multicast IP datagrams, the IP module
  must be extended to maintain a list of host group memberships
  associated with each network interface.  An incoming datagram
  destined to one of those groups is processed exactly the same way as
  datagrams destined to one of the host's individual addresses.
  Incoming datagrams destined to groups to which the host does not
  belong are discarded without generating any error report or log
  entry.  On hosts with more than one network interface, if a datagram
  arrives via one interface, destined for a group to which the host
  belongs only on a different interface, the datagram is quietly
  discarded.  (These cases should occur only as a result of inadequate
  multicast address filtering in a local network module.)
  An incoming datagram is not rejected for having an IP time-to-live of
  1 (i.e., the time-to-live should not automatically be decremented on
  arriving datagrams that are not being forwarded).  An incoming
  datagram with an IP host group address in its source address field is
  quietly discarded.  An ICMP error message (Destination Unreachable,
  Time Exceeded, Parameter Problem, Source Quench, or Redirect) is
  never generated in response to a datagram destined to an IP host
  group.
  The list of host group memberships is updated in response to
  JoinHostGroup and LeaveHostGroup requests from upper-layer protocols.
  Each membership should have an associated reference count or similar
  mechanism to handle multiple requests to join and leave the same
  group.  On the first request to join and the last request to leave a
  group on a given interface, the local network module for that
  interface is notified, so that it may update its multicast reception
  filter (see section 7.3).
  The IP module must also be extended to implement the IGMP protocol,
  specified in Appendix I. IGMP is used to keep neighboring multicast
  routers informed of the host group memberships present on a
  particular local network.  To support IGMP, every level 2 host must
  join the "all-hosts" group (address 224.0.0.1) on each network
  interface at initialization time and must remain a member for as long
  as the host is active.



Deering [Page 8]

RFC 1112 Host Extensions for IP Multicasting August 1989


  (Datagrams addressed to the all-hosts group are recognized as a
  special case by the multicast routers and are never forwarded beyond
  a single network, regardless of their time-to-live.  Thus, the all-
  hosts address may not be used as an internet-wide broadcast address.
  For the purpose of IGMP, membership in the all-hosts group is really
  necessary only while the host belongs to at least one other group.
  However, it is specified that the host shall remain a member of the
  all-hosts group at all times because (1) it is simpler, (2) the
  frequency of reception of unnecessary IGMP queries should be low
  enough that overhead is negligible, and (3) the all-hosts address may
  serve other routing-oriented purposes, such as advertising the
  presence of gateways or resolving local addresses.)

7.3. Extensions to the Local Network Service Interface

  Incoming local network multicast packets are delivered to the IP
  module using the same "Receive Local" operation as local network
  unicast packets.  To allow the IP module to tell the local network
  module which multicast packets to accept, the local network service
  interface is extended to provide two new operations:
                     JoinLocalGroup  ( group-address )
                     LeaveLocalGroup ( group-address )
  where "group-address" is an IP host group address.  The
  JoinLocalGroup operation requests the local network module to accept
  and deliver up subsequently arriving packets destined to the given IP
  host group address.  The LeaveLocalGroup operation requests the local
  network module to stop delivering up packets destined to the given IP
  host group address.  The local network module is expected to map the
  IP host group addresses to local network addresses as required to
  update its multicast reception filter.  Any local network module is
  free to ignore LeaveLocalGroup requests, and may deliver up packets
  destined to more addresses than just those specified in
  JoinLocalGroup requests, if it is unable to filter incoming packets
  adequately.
  The local network module must not deliver up any multicast packets
  that were transmitted from that module; loopback of multicasts is
  handled at the IP layer or higher.

7.4. Extensions to an Ethernet Local Network Module

  To support the reception of multicast IP datagrams, an Ethernet
  module must be able to receive packets addressed to the Ethernet
  multicast addresses that correspond to the host's IP host group
  addresses.  It is highly desirable to take advantage of any address


Deering [Page 9]

RFC 1112 Host Extensions for IP Multicasting August 1989


  filtering capabilities that the Ethernet hardware interface may have,
  so that the host receives only those packets that are destined to it.
  Unfortunately, many current Ethernet interfaces have a small limit on
  the number of addresses that the hardware can be configured to
  recognize.  Nevertheless, an implementation must be capable of
  listening on an arbitrary number of Ethernet multicast addresses,
  which may mean "opening up" the address filter to accept all
  multicast packets during those periods when the number of addresses
  exceeds the limit of the filter.
  For interfaces with inadequate hardware address filtering, it may be
  desirable (for performance reasons) to perform Ethernet address
  filtering within the software of the Ethernet module.  This is not
  mandatory, however, because the IP module performs its own filtering
  based on IP destination addresses.

7.5. Extensions to Local Network Modules other than Ethernet

  Other multicast networks, such as IEEE 802.2 networks, can be handled
  the same way as Ethernet for the purpose of receiving multicast IP
  datagrams.  For pure broadcast networks, such as the Experimental
  Ethernet, all incoming broadcast packets can be accepted and passed
  to the IP module for IP-level filtering.  On point-to-point or
  store-and-forward networks, multicast IP datagrams will arrive as
  local network unicasts, so no change to the local network module
  should be necessary.













Deering [Page 10]

RFC 1112 Host Extensions for IP Multicasting August 1989


APPENDIX I. INTERNET GROUP MANAGEMENT PROTOCOL (IGMP)

  The Internet Group Management Protocol (IGMP) is used by IP hosts to
  report their host group memberships to any immediately-neighboring
  multicast routers.  IGMP is an asymmetric protocol and is specified
  here from the point of view of a host, rather than a multicast
  router.  (IGMP may also be used, symmetrically or asymmetrically,
  between multicast routers.  Such use is not specified here.)
  Like ICMP, IGMP is a integral part of IP.  It is required to be
  implemented by all hosts conforming to level 2 of the IP multicasting
  specification.  IGMP messages are encapsulated in IP datagrams, with
  an IP protocol number of 2.  All IGMP messages of concern to hosts
  have the following format:
      0                   1                   2                   3
      0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1
     +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
     |Version| Type  |    Unused     |           Checksum            |
     +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
     |                         Group Address                         |
     +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
     Version
        This memo specifies version 1 of IGMP.  Version 0 is specified
        in RFC-988 and is now obsolete.
     Type
        There are two types of IGMP message of concern to hosts:
           1 = Host Membership Query
           2 = Host Membership Report
     Unused
        Unused field, zeroed when sent, ignored when received.
     Checksum
        The checksum is the 16-bit one's complement of the one's
        complement sum of the 8-octet IGMP message.  For computing
        the checksum, the checksum field is zeroed.
     Group Address
        In a Host Membership Query message, the group address field


Deering [Page 11]

RFC 1112 Host Extensions for IP Multicasting August 1989


        is zeroed when sent, ignored when received.
        In a Host Membership Report message, the group address field
        holds the IP host group address of the group being reported.

Informal Protocol Description

  Multicast routers send Host Membership Query messages (hereinafter
  called Queries) to discover which host groups have members on their
  attached local networks.  Queries are addressed to the all-hosts
  group (address 224.0.0.1), and carry an IP time-to-live of 1.
  Hosts respond to a Query by generating Host Membership Reports
  (hereinafter called Reports), reporting each host group to which they
  belong on the network interface from which the Query was received.
  In order to avoid an "implosion" of concurrent Reports and to reduce
  the total number of Reports transmitted, two techniques are used:
     1. When a host receives a Query, rather than sending Reports
        immediately, it starts a report delay timer for each of its
        group memberships on the network interface of the incoming
        Query.  Each timer is set to a different, randomly-chosen
        value between zero and D seconds.  When a timer expires, a
        Report is generated for the corresponding host group.  Thus,
        Reports are spread out over a D second interval instead of
        all occurring at once.
     2. A Report is sent with an IP destination address equal to the
        host group address being reported, and with an IP
        time-to-live of 1, so that other members of the same group on
        the same network can overhear the Report.  If a host hears a
        Report for a group to which it belongs on that network, the
        host stops its own timer for that group and does not generate
        a Report for that group.  Thus, in the normal case, only one
        Report will be generated for each group present on the
        network, by the member host whose delay timer expires first.
        Note that the multicast routers receive all IP multicast
        datagrams, and therefore need not be addressed explicitly.
        Further note that the routers need not know which hosts
        belong to a group, only that at least one host belongs to a
        group on a particular network.
  There are two exceptions to the behavior described above.  First, if
  a report delay timer is already running for a group membership when a
  Query is received, that timer is not reset to a new random value, but
  rather allowed to continue running with its current value.  Second, a
  report delay timer is never set for a host's membership in the all-
  hosts group (224.0.0.1), and that membership is never reported.


Deering [Page 12]

RFC 1112 Host Extensions for IP Multicasting August 1989


  If a host uses a pseudo-random number generator to compute the
  reporting delays, one of the host's own individual IP address should
  be used as part of the seed for the generator, to reduce the chance
  of multiple hosts generating the same sequence of delays.
  A host should confirm that a received Report has the same IP host
  group address in its IP destination field and its IGMP group address
  field, to ensure that the host's own Report is not cancelled by an
  erroneous received Report.  A host should quietly discard any IGMP
  message of type other than Host Membership Query or Host Membership
  Report.
  Multicast routers send Queries periodically to refresh their
  knowledge of memberships present on a particular network.  If no
  Reports are received for a particular group after some number of
  Queries, the routers assume that that group has no local members and
  that they need not forward remotely-originated multicasts for that
  group onto the local network.  Queries are normally sent infrequently
  (no more than once a minute) so as to keep the IGMP overhead on hosts
  and networks very low.  However, when a multicast router starts up,
  it may issue several closely-spaced Queries in order to build up its
  knowledge of local memberships quickly.
  When a host joins a new group, it should immediately transmit a
  Report for that group, rather than waiting for a Query, in case it is
  the first member of that group on the network.  To cover the
  possibility of the initial Report being lost or damaged, it is
  recommended that it be repeated once or twice after short delays.  (A
  simple way to accomplish this is to act as if a Query had been
  received for that group only, setting the group's random report delay
  timer.  The state transition diagram below illustrates this
  approach.)
  Note that, on a network with no multicast routers present, the only
  IGMP traffic is the one or more Reports sent whenever a host joins a
  new group.

State Transition Diagram

  IGMP behavior is more formally specified by the state transition
  diagram below.  A host may be in one of three possible states, with
  respect to any single IP host group on any single network interface:
     - Non-Member state, when the host does not belong to the group
       on the interface.  This is the initial state for all
       memberships on all network interfaces; it requires no storage
       in the host.



Deering [Page 13]

RFC 1112 Host Extensions for IP Multicasting August 1989


     - Delaying Member state, when the host belongs to the group on
       the interface and has a report delay timer running for that
       membership.
     - Idle Member state, when the host belongs to the group on the
       interface and does not have a report delay timer running for
       that membership.
  There are five significant events that can cause IGMP state
  transitions:
     - "join group" occurs when the host decides to join the group on
       the interface.  It may occur only in the Non-Member state.
     - "leave group" occurs when the host decides to leave the group
       on the interface.  It may occur only in the Delaying Member
       and Idle Member states.
     - "query received" occurs when the host receives a valid IGMP
       Host Membership Query message.  To be valid, the Query message
       must be at least 8 octets long, have a correct IGMP
       checksum and have an IP destination address of 224.0.0.1.
       A single Query applies to all memberships on the
       interface from which the Query is received.  It is ignored for
       memberships in the Non-Member or Delaying Member state.
     - "report received" occurs when the host receives a valid IGMP
       Host Membership Report message.  To be valid, the Report
       message must be at least 8 octets long, have a correct IGMP
       checksum, and contain the same IP host group address in its IP
       destination field and its IGMP group address field.  A Report
       applies only to the membership in the group identified by the
       Report, on the interface from which the Report is received.
       It is ignored for memberships in the Non-Member or Idle Member
       state.
     - "timer expired" occurs when the report delay timer for the
       group on the interface expires.  It may occur only in the
       Delaying Member state.
  All other events, such as receiving invalid IGMP messages, or IGMP
  messages other than Query or Report, are ignored in all states.
  There are three possible actions that may be taken in response to the
  above events:
     - "send report" for the group on the interface.



Deering [Page 14]

RFC 1112 Host Extensions for IP Multicasting August 1989


     - "start timer" for the group on the interface, using a random
       delay value between 0 and D seconds.
     - "stop timer" for the group on the interface.
  In the following diagram, each state transition arc is labelled with
  the event that causes the transition, and, in parentheses, any
  actions taken during the transition.
                             ________________
                            |                |
                            |                |
                            |                |
                            |                |
                  --------->|   Non-Member   |<---------
                 |          |                |          |
                 |          |                |          |
                 |          |                |          |
                 |          |________________|          |
                 |                   |                  |
                 | leave group       | join group       | leave group
                 | (stop timer)      |(send report,     |
                 |                   | start timer)     |
         ________|________           |          ________|________
        |                 |<---------          |                 |
        |                 |                    |                 |
        |                 |<-------------------|                 |
        |                 |   query received   |                 |
        | Delaying Member |    (start timer)   |   Idle Member   |
        |                 |------------------->|                 |
        |                 |   report received  |                 |
        |                 |    (stop timer)    |                 |
        |_________________|------------------->|_________________|
                               timer expired
                               (send report)
  The all-hosts group (address 224.0.0.1) is handled as a special case.
  The host starts in Idle Member state for that group on every
  interface, never transitions to another state, and never sends a
  report for that group.

Protocol Parameters

  The maximum report delay, D, is 10 seconds.




Deering [Page 15]

RFC 1112 Host Extensions for IP Multicasting August 1989


APPENDIX II. HOST GROUP ADDRESS ISSUES

  This appendix is not part of the IP multicasting specification, but
  provides background discussion of several issues related to IP host
  group addresses.

Group Address Binding

  The binding of IP host group addresses to physical hosts may be
  considered a generalization of the binding of IP unicast addresses.
  An IP unicast address is statically bound to a single local network
  interface on a single IP network.  An IP host group address is
  dynamically bound to a set of local network interfaces on a set of IP
  networks.
  It is important to understand that an IP host group address is NOT
  bound to a set of IP unicast addresses.  The multicast routers do not
  need to maintain a list of individual members of each host group.
  For example, a multicast router attached to an Ethernet need
  associate only a single Ethernet multicast address with each host
  group having local members, rather than a list of the members'
  individual IP or Ethernet addresses.

Allocation of Transient Host Group Addresses

  This memo does not specify how transient group address are allocated.
  It is anticipated that different portions of the IP transient host
  group address space will be allocated using different techniques.
  For example, there may be a number of servers that can be contacted
  to acquire a new transient group address.  Some higher-level
  protocols (such as VMTP, specified in RFC-1045) may generate higher-
  level transient "process group" or "entity group" addresses which are
  then algorithmically mapped to a subset of the IP transient host
  group addresses, similarly to the way that IP host group addresses
  are mapped to Ethernet multicast addresses.  A portion of the IP
  group address space may be set aside for random allocation by
  applications that can tolerate occasional collisions with other
  multicast users, perhaps generating new addresses until a suitably
  "quiet" one is found.
  In general, a host cannot assume that datagrams sent to any host
  group address will reach only the intended hosts, or that datagrams
  received as a member of a transient host group are intended for the
  recipient.  Misdelivery must be detected at a level above IP, using
  higher-level identifiers or authentication tokens.  Information
  transmitted to a host group address should be encrypted or governed
  by administrative routing controls if the sender is concerned about
  unwanted listeners.


Deering [Page 16]

RFC 1112 Host Extensions for IP Multicasting August 1989


Author's Address

  Steve Deering
  Stanford University
  Computer Science Department
  Stanford, CA 94305-2140
  Phone: (415) 723-9427
  EMail: [email protected]





















Deering [Page 17]