Group Policies

Advanced Switch Features

Automatic IPX RIP/SAP Control

To further reduce network traffic, you can check the Automatic IPX RIP/SAP Control check box. The switch will intercept RIPs and SAPs, broadcasting them only to ports where IPX routers or servers have been detected, or to ports that have been configured to transmit RIPs or SAPs. When this feature is not enabled, IPX RIP/SAP packets are forwarded to all ports.

Automatic IP Gateway Configuration

When Automatic IP Gateway Configuration is enabled, the switch will modify replies from the DHCP server so that the Default Gateway IP address of client becomes the client’s own IP address. This is useful in a multinetted environment (where more than one IP network is configured in a single broadcast domain).

See Routing Information Protocol.

Internet Group Management Protocol (IGMP)

Multimedia and email applications need the ability to communicate to multiple destinations efficiently. IP multicasting allows hosts to dynamically register for sending or receiving multicast traffic.

The Internet Group Management Protocol is a method for automatically controlling multicast traffic through the network. Using multicasting, applications can send one copy of a packet addressed to a group of computers that wish to receive it. This method is more efficient than sending a separate copy to each node. Other advantages of multicasting include:

information delivered in a timely, synchronized manner because all desti- nation nodes receive the same packet

information can be sent to destinations whose addresses are unknown

reduces the number of packets on the network because only one multicast packet is sent.

IGMP uses multicast queriers and hosts that support IGMP to manage multicast traffic on the network. It specifies how the host informs the network that it is a member of a multicast group. A set of queriers and hosts that send and receive data from the same set of sources is a multicast group.

The HP switches have a standards-based IGMP implementation. The switches process IGMP packets by learning which of the switch’s interfaces are linked to hosts that are members of multicast groups and multicast routers. It limits multicast traffic by monitoring the IGMP traffic to learn which hosts are in which multicast groups, then allowing IP multicast traffic to be sent only to ports with valid host group members.

When a switch receives an IGMP packet, it updates the internal IP multicast forwarding table with the IGMP membership read from that packet. The switch then sends the packet to the ports with members of the destination multicast group.

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