UKERNA IP Multicast Mini Workshop Intra-domain Multicast Hands-on Lab Exercises Networkshop 2006.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
UKERNA IP Multicast Hands-on Workshop Lab 3: IP Multicast, Inter-domain Networkshop 2006.
Advertisements

LAN Segmentation Virtual LAN (VLAN).
© 2008 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved.Cisco ConfidentialPresentation_ID 1 Chapter 4: Routing Concepts Routing Protocols.
/30 Host Name : R1 Serial 0/0/0.1.2 Host Name : R2 Router Lab 3 : 2 - Routers Connection DTE DCE.
 WAN uses Serial ports  Ethernet Ports:  Straight through  Cross over.
© 2006 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved.Cisco PublicITE I Chapter 6 1 Implement Inter- VLAN Routing LAN Switching and Wireless – Chapter 6.
The subnet /28 has been selected to be further subnetted to support point-to-point serial links. What is the maximum number of serial links.
Xing Li CERNET NOC/TEIN2 NOC
© 2006 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved.Cisco Public 1 Version 4.0 Implementing IP Addressing Services Accessing the WAN – Chapter 7.
CCNP Network Route IPV-6 Part-III IPV-6 Static Routing: R1(Conf t)# ip routing  (Turn on Routing) R1(Conf t)# ipv6 unicast-routing  (Turn on ipv6 routing)
Switching & Operations. Address learning Forward/filter decision Loop avoidance Three Switch Functions.
Ch. 1 – Scaling IP Addresses NAT/PAT and DHCP CCNA 4 version 3.0.
© 2008 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved.Cisco ConfidentialPresentation_ID 1 Chapter 10: DHCP Routing & Switching.
Instructor & Todd Lammle
© 2008 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved.Cisco ConfidentialPresentation_ID 1 Chapter 10: DHCP Routing and Switching Essentials.
CEG3185 Tutorial 7 Routers and Routing. IP Address An Internet Protocol address (IP address) is a numerical label assigned to each device (e.g., computer,
© 2006 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved.Cisco Public BSCI Module 7 Lesson 2 1 IP Multicasting: IGMP and Layer 2 Issues.
Lecture Week 7 Implementing IP Addressing Services.
© J. Liebeherr, All rights reserved 1 IP Multicasting.
Introduction An introduction to the software and organization of the Internet Lab.
Introduction An introduction to the equipment and organization of the Internet Lab.
© 2012 Cisco and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved. 1 CCNA Security 1.1 Instructional Resource Chapter 10 – Implementing the Cisco Adaptive Security.
Speaker 2006/XX/XX Speaker 2007/XX/XX IGMP Snooping CK NG Technical Marketing.
Module 7: Configuring TCP/IP Addressing and Name Resolution.
1 Routing Introduction to Routing Static Routing.
© 2006 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved. Network Security 2 Module 8 – PIX Security Appliance Contexts, Failover, and Management.
Multicasting  A message can be unicast, multicast, or broadcast.
Connecting Networks © 2004 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved. Exploring How IP Address Protocols Work INTRO v2.0—4-1.
Lab How to Use WANem Last Update Copyright 2011 Kenneth M. Chipps Ph.D. 1.
© 2006 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved.1 Microsoft Network Load Balancing Support Vivek V
© 2008 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved.Cisco ConfidentialPresentation_ID 1 Chapter 10: DHCP Routing and Switching Essentials.
© 2008 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved.Cisco ConfidentialPresentation_ID 1 Chapter 10: DHCP Routing & Switching.
1 How to Enable IPv6 in Your Subnet Quincy Wu March 10, 2004.
Implementing IP Addressing Services Accessing the WAN – Chapter 7.
VLAN V irtual L ocal A rea N etwork VLAN Network performance is a key factor in the productivity of an organization. One of the technologies used to.
Cisco S2 C4 Router Components. Configure a Router You can configure a router from –from the console terminal (a computer connected to the router –through.
© J. Liebeherr, All rights reserved 1 Multicast Routing.
Cisco Discovery Protocol. CDP and Router Boot Up When a Cisco device boots up, CDP starts up automatically and allows the device to detect neighbor devices.
Enabling Port Security
© J. Liebeherr, All rights reserved 1 IP Multicasting.
1 © 2000, Cisco Systems, Inc _05_2000_c2 Server Router Unicast Server Router Multicast Unicast vs. Multicast.
1 © 2005 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved. 111 © 2004, Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved. CNIT 221 Security 2 ver.2 Module 8 City College.
Introduction An introduction to the equipment and organization of the Internet Lab.
Multicasting  A message can be unicast, multicast, or broadcast. Let us clarify these terms as they relate to the Internet.
© 2008 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved.Cisco ConfidentialPresentation_ID 1 Chapter 3: VLANs Routing & Switching.
CN2668 Routers and Switches Kemtis Kunanuraksapong MSIS with Distinction MCTS, MCDST, MCP, A+
+ Routing Concepts 1 st semester Objectives  Describe the primary functions and features of a router.  Explain how routers use information.
Campus Planning for Multicast Frank Aversa, NJIT Jim Stankiewicz, Verizon Business.
Engineering Workshops 96 ASM. Engineering Workshops 97 ASM Allows SPTs and RPTs RP: –Matches senders with receivers –Provides network source discovery.
CHAPTER 10: DHCP Routing & Switching. Objectives 10.0 Introduction 10.1 Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol v Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol.
Cisco Routers Routers collectively provide the main feature of the network layer—the capability to forward packets end-to-end through a network. routers.
Instructor Materials Chapter 2: Scaling VLANs
Instructor Materials Chapter 4: Network Addressing
IFIP-UNU ADVANCED COURSE ON NETWORKING AND SECURITY Module II-Wireless Communications Section 5 Access Points.
Introduction An introduction to the software and organization of the Internet Lab.
Chapter 2 Overview of Networking Components
Switch Setup Connectivity to Other locations Via MPLS/LL etc
Chapter 4: Routing Concepts
Chapter 10: DHCP Routing & Switching Chapter 10: DHCP
Virtual LANs.
Chapter 2: Scaling VLANs
Instructor & Todd Lammle
Introduction An introduction to the software and organization of the Internet Lab.
Routing and Switching Essentials v6.0
Net 412 (Practical Part) LAB 5-port security
Implementing IP Addressing Services
Routing and Switching Essentials v6.0
Implementing IP Addressing Services
Chapter 10: Advanced Cisco Adaptive Security Appliance
Multicasting Unicast.
Presentation transcript:

UKERNA IP Multicast Mini Workshop Intra-domain Multicast Hands-on Lab Exercises Networkshop 2006

Laboratory Overview Study the lab network topology Get familiar with Windows XP workstation platform and Cisco 2801 router platform Configure multicast on your edge and access router Configure a PIM Rendezvous Point (RP) Run ssmping/asmping tests Observe edge router multicast states

Getting help External network access Cisco IOS versions in use –12.4T series Online reference Ask the helpers!

Cisco IOS Knowledge of Cisco IOS would be useful. If new… Most configuration is undertaken with level-15 privileges (reached by “enable” on the console) Commands tab out, type “?” to show possibilities, a good starting point is “show ?”, e.g. “show ip interfaces” Use “config terminal” to enter configuration mode.

Laboratory topology Topology –See the separate network map –Six teams, A-F IP address space for the lab – /24 –2001:630:23f::/48 (not used in our mini workshop) Admin privileges –See topology sheet

Your Team cluster Each group has the following: –Cisco 2801 or 3825 access router Two Ethernet ports (one uplink one downlink) –Cisco 2801 edge router One Ethernet uplink One single Ethernet subnet, one QuadFE subnet –Client nodes Two Windows XP Service Pack 2 PCs, split into two subnets –Full IPv4 unicast connectivity

Current setup IPv4 unicast in ‘provider’ –Routing IPv4 unicast towards your access router –Routing IPv4 unicast from your access router to your edge router –Subnet routes (IPv4 unicast) for your workstation systems Stock IPv4 on your client subnets –Off-the-shelf Windows XP SP2 –Manually configured IP settings (no DHCP) Next step: get the edge router ready –Configuring IP multicast

Multicast on the edge router Configure multicast on the edge router First inspect multicast setup Then turn on IP multicast Configure SSM default Disable IGMP snooping

Quad FE cards and IGMP snooping Edge router interfaces –One FE –One Quad FE A vlan has been configured spanning the Quad FE interface –IOS can be configured to do IGMP snooping to be ‘smart’ about which multicast traffic is flooded to which physical interfaces –For the sake of the workshop, we keep the setup ‘clean’

Multicast on the host interfaces You now need to enter interface-specific commands to enable multicast on the edge router host subnets Single FE port: –Turn on PIM-SM –Turn on IGMPv3 Quad FE port: –Turn on PIM-SM –Turn on IGMPv3

Edge Router uplink The next step is to enable multicast on the edge router uplink –Turn on PIM We don’t need to enable IGMPv3, as that is a host- to-router protocol and this link is router-to-router We will then move on to configure your Team’s access router.

Multicast on access router There are three steps to configuring the access router –First, turn on multicast –Second, enable multicast interfaces (PIM) –Third, configure the RP Here we do the first two steps. Note Teams A-C have a Cisco 2801 access router, while Teams D-F have a Cisco 3825, so the interfaces will be slightly different –fa0/1 (on 2801) as opposed to gi0/1 (on 3825)

Configuring the RP The RP function runs on one router in the PIM domain –We don’t consider failover or Anycast-RP here Need to pick an RP address Next, we configure the RP

Configuring the RP address First we need to create a loopback interface and assign it an IP address (that will be the RP address) We need to configure the RP address on the edge and access router –See the topology diagram for allocated RP addresses

IOS commands to try There are some specific IOS commands you can use to view the PIM state on the router(s) –Look at the PIM interfaces –Look at the PIM neighbors –Check RP information –Show how router is doing RPF –Look at IGMP group information –Look at the multicast routing table

About ssmping Testing multicast connectivity Use ssmping –Run daemon ssmpingd server on one system –Run client ssmping on another Client signals to server that it wishes to receive multicast –Server responds with multicast (and unicast)

Using ssmping We now wish to observe multicast flows between the subnets attached to our edge router –We’ll use ssmping Running ssmping between workstations –Client to server –Check multicast route states

Exploring the PIM domain Having configured the RP, you can also test the PIM- SM multicast operation using asmping –asmping is the ASM variant of ssmping Run asmping between two workstations –Observe PIM-SM protocol in action –Observe router multicast states/routing tables

Using asmping The asmping client works similarly to ssmping –But you need to specify a group address to use asmping –An example group to use could be Note that the group address you use must end.234 (a ‘security’ feature of asmping).

Aside: Ethereal Windows packet analyser –Preinstalled for you Allows capture of multicast traffic Useful to understand multicast flows on the network Allows filtering –e.g. all multicast traffic –Traffic to/from a specific host Have a go if time permits

Lab Overview What did we do What did we learn What would be different in the real world