ATIS 0200004-2012 CDN Interconnection Use Cases and Requirements for Multicast-Based Content Distribution.pdf
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1、 TECHNICAL REPORT ATIS-0200004 CDN INTERCONNECTION USE CASES AND REQUIREMENTS FOR MULTICAST-BASED CONTENT DISTRIBUTION ATIS is the leading technical planning and standards development organization committed to the rapid development of global, market-driven standards for the information, entertainmen
2、t and communications industry. More than 200 companies actively formulate standards in ATIS Committees, covering issues including: IPTV, Cloud Services, Energy Efficiency, IP-Based and Wireless Technologies, Quality of Service, Billing and Operational Support, Emergency Services, Architectural Platf
3、orms and Emerging Networks. In addition, numerous Incubators, Focus and Exploratory Groups address evolving industry priorities including Smart Grid, Machine-to-Machine, Connected Vehicle, IP Downloadable Security, Policy Management and Network Optimization. ATIS is the North American Organizational
4、 Partner for the 3rd Generation Partnership Project (3GPP), a member and major U.S. contributor to the International Telecommunication Union (ITU) Radio and Telecommunications Sectors, and a member of the Inter-American Telecommunication Commission (CITEL). ATIS is accredited by the American Nationa
5、l Standards Institute (ANSI). For more information, please visit . Notice of Disclaimer multicast has to be turned on end-to-end in every layer 3 device between the source and the recipient to function. With the Internet, many local service providers and customer equipment (e.g., home routers) are n
6、ot multicast-enabled. Since multicast is not ubiquitous, IETF defined an interim solution ietf-id-AMT, called Automatic IP Multicast Tunneling (AMT)6. AMT multicast provides a way to simply connect together multicast islands and ease the transition to ubiquitous multicast deployment without requirin
7、g wide-scale changes. It is a hybrid solution that allows a multicast-enabled host (e.g., the multicast-enabled media player) connected to a unicast network with no native multicast support to exchange Source Specific Multicast (SSM) traffic with a native multicast infrastructure without the need fo
8、r any explicit tunnels between the receiver and the source. AMT uses an encapsulation interface so that no changes to a host stack or applications are required because AMT is agnostic to higher level protocols. Table 1: Multicast Terminology Term Definition (Source, Group) (S, G) Multicast address n
9、otation is in the format of addresses that indicate the multicast group and its source of information. Source (S) is the source IP address. With this service, it is the Multicast Media Server. Group (G) is the multicast IP address. The group IP address may be reused for different sources. In essence
10、, devices in a multicast group listen for (share) a single address that identifies a multicast session. The Multicast address can be dynamically assigned for a specific multicast session. This algorithm enables packets to be forwarded to only members of the group. Anycasting Anycast is a network add
11、ressing and routing scheme whereby data is routed to the “nearest“ or “best“ destination as viewed by the routing topology. With anycast, each destination address identifies a set of receiver endpoints, but only one of them is chosen at any given time to receive information from any given sender. BG
12、P is used to simultaneously announce the same destination IP address from many different routers. Thisresults in packets addressed to the destination address being routed to the “nearest” point on the network announcing the given destination IP address. External Border Gateway Protocol (eBGP) Extern
13、al Border Gateway Protocol (eBGP) is the protocol used to transport information to other BGP enabled systems in different autonomous systems (AS). Border Gateway Multicast Protocol (BGMP) The Border Gateway Multicast Protocol (BGMP) is an on-going IETF project that is attempting to design a true int
14、er-domain multicast routing protocol. BGMP should be able to scale in order to operate in the global Internet RFC3913. 6The IETF specification can be found at . An earlier version of this Internet Draft was titled Automatic IP Multicast Without Explicit Tunnels. ATIS-0200004 5 Term Definition Multic
15、ast Extensions for BGP (MBGP) Multiprotocol Extensions for BGP (MBGP), sometimes referred to as Multiprotocol BGP or Multicast BGP and defined in RFC4760, is an extension to Border Gateway Protocol that allows different types of addresses (known as address families) to be distributed in parallel. Wh
16、ereas standard BGP supports only IPv4 unicast addresses, Multiprotocol BGP supports IPv4 and IPv6 addresses and it supports unicast and multicast variants of each. Multiprotocol BGP allows information about the topology of IP Multicast-capable routers to be exchanged separately from the topology of
17、normal IPv4 unicast routers. Thus, it allows a multicast routing topology different from the unicast routing topology. Although MBGP enables the exchange of inter-domain multicast routing information, other protocols such as the Protocol Independent Multicast family are needed to build trees and for
18、ward multicast traffic. Multicast Multicast is a method of transmitting data across a network that allows many clients to receive the same data stream. This minimizes the amount of bandwidth required to transmit the data to a group of network clients. Multicast transmission requires that the routers
19、 and switches on the network be multicast-enabled, which means that they can transmit class-D IP addresses and interpret multicast information packets. Source-Specific Multicast (SSM) Source-specific multicast (SSM) is used by hosts (e.g., PC) to receive data from one particular source only. With SS
20、M, a host identifies a multicast data stream with a source and group address pair (S, G), rather than by group address alone as with Any Source Multicast (ASM). SSM is useful in applications like video broadcasting where there is one source. Protocol-Independent Multicast Protocol-Independent Multic
21、ast (PIM) is a family of multicast routing protocols for Internet Protocol (IP) networks that provide one-to-many and many-to-many distribution of data over a LAN, WAN or the Internet. It is termed protocol-independent because PIM does not include its own topology discovery mechanism, but instead us
22、es routing information supplied by other traditional routing protocols such as the Border Gateway Protocol (BGP). There are four variants of PIM: PIM Sparse Mode (PIM-SM) explicitly builds unidirectional shared trees rooted at a rendezvous point (RP) per group, and optionally creates shortest-path t
23、rees per source. PIM-SM generally scales fairly well for wide-area usage RFC4601. PIM Dense Mode (PIM-DM) uses dense multicast routing. It implicitly builds shortest-path trees by flooding multicast traffic domain-wide, and then pruning back branches of the tree where no receivers are present. PIM-D
24、M is straightforward to implement but generally has poor scaling properties. The first multicast routing protocol, DVMRP, used dense-mode multicast routing RFC3973. Bidirectional PIM explicitly builds shared bi-directional trees. It never builds a shortest path tree, so may have longer end-to-end de
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