Monitoring and Maintaining IP Multicast

This module describes many ways to monitor and maintain an IP multicast network, such as

  • displaying which neighboring multicast routers are peering with the local router

  • displaying multicast packet rates and loss information

  • tracing the path from a source to a destination branch for a multicast distribution tree

  • displaying the contents of the IP multicast routing table, information about interfaces configured for PIM, the PIM neighbors discovered by the router, and contents of the IP fast-switching cache

  • clearing caches, tables, and databases

  • monitoring the delivery of IP multicast packets and being alerted if the delivery fails to meet certain parameters (IP multicast heartbeat)

  • using session description and announcement protocols and applications to assist the advertisement of multicast multimedia conferences and other multicast sessions and communicating the relevant session setup information to prospective participants (SAP listener support)

  • storing IP multicast packet headers in a cache and displaying them to find out information such as who is sending IP multicast packets to what groups and any multicast forwarding loops in your network

  • using managed objects to remotely monitor and configure PIM using Simple Network Management Protocol (SNMP)

  • disabling fast switching of IP multicast in order to log debug messages

Finding Feature Information

Your software release may not support all the features documented in this module. For the latest caveats and feature information, see Bug Search Tool and the release notes for your platform and software release. To find information about the features documented in this module, and to see a list of the releases in which each feature is supported, see the feature information table.

Use Cisco Feature Navigator to find information about platform support and Cisco software image support. To access Cisco Feature Navigator, go to https://cfnng.cisco.com/. An account on Cisco.com is not required.

Prerequisites for Monitoring and Maintaining IP Multicast

  • Before performing the tasks in this module, you should be familiar with the concepts described in the “IP Multicast Technology Overview” module.

  • You must also have enabled IP multicast and have Protocol Independent Multicast (PIM) configured and running on your network. Refer to the “Configuring Basic IP Multicast” module.

Information About Monitoring and Maintaining IP Multicast

IP Multicast Heartbeat

The IP Multicast Heartbeat feature enables you to monitor the delivery of IP multicast packets and to be alerted if the delivery fails to meet certain parameters.

Although you could alternatively use MRM to monitor IP multicast, you can perform the following tasks with IP multicast heartbeat that you cannot perform with MRM:

  • Generate an SNMP trap

  • Monitor a production multicast stream

When IP multicast heartbeat is enabled, the router monitors IP multicast packets destined for a particular multicast group at a particular interval. If the number of packets observed is less than a configured minimum amount, the router sends an SNMP trap to a specified network management station to indicate a loss of heartbeat exception.

The ip multicast heartbeat command does not create a heartbeat if there is no existing multicast forwarding state for group in the router. This command will not create a multicast forwarding state in the router. Use the ip igmp static-group command on the router or on a downstream router to force forwarding of IP multicast traffic. Use the snmp-server host ipmulticast command to enable the sending of IP multicast traps to specific receiver hosts. Use the debug ip mhbeat command to debug the Multicast Heartbeat feature.

Session Announcement Protocol (SAP)

Session Announcement Protocol (SAP) listener support is needed to use session description and announcement protocols and applications to assist the advertisement of multicast multimedia conferences and other multicast sessions and to communicate the relevant session setup information to prospective participants.

Sessions are described by the Session Description Protocol (SDP), which is defined in RFC 2327. SDP provides a formatted, textual description of session properties (for example, contact information, session lifetime, and the media) being used in the session (for example, audio, video, and whiteboard) with their specific attributes such as time-to-live (TTL) scope, group address, and User Datagram Protocol (UDP) port number.

Many multimedia applications rely on SDP for session descriptions. However, they may use different methods to disseminate these session descriptions. For example, IP/TV relies on the web to disseminate session descriptions to participants. In this example, participants must know of a web server that provides the session information.

MBONE applications (for example, vic, vat, and wb) and other applications rely on multicast session information sent throughout the network. In these cases, SAP is used to transport the SDP session announcements. SAP Version 2 uses the well-known session directory multicast group 224.2.127.254 to disseminate SDP session descriptions for global scope sessions and group 239.255.255.255 for administrative scope sessions.


Note

The Session Directory (SDR) application is commonly used to send and receive SDP/SAP session announcements.


PIM MIB Extensions for SNMP Traps for IP Multicast

Protocol Independent Multicast (PIM) is an IP multicast routing protocol used for routing multicast data packets to multicast groups. RFC 2934 defines the PIM MIB for IPv4, which describes managed objects that enable users to remotely monitor and configure PIM using Simple Network Management Protocol (SNMP).

PIM MIB extensions introduce the following new classes of PIM notifications:

  • neighbor-change--This notification results from the following conditions:
    • A dDevice’s PIM interface is disabled or enabled (using the ip pim command in interface configuration mode)
    • A dDevice's PIM neighbor adjacency expires (defined in RFC 2934)
  • rp-mapping-change--This notification results from a change in the rendezvous point (RP) mapping information due to either Auto-RP messages or bootstrap router (BSR) messages.

  • invalid-pim-message--This notification results from the following conditions:
    • An invalid (*, G) Join or Prune message is received by the device (for example, when a dDevice receives a Join or Prune message for which the RP specified in the packet is not the RP for the multicast group)
    • An invalid PIM register message is received by the device (for example, when a dDevice receives a register message from a multicast group for which it is not the RP)

Benefits of PIM MIB Extensions

PIM MIB extensions:

  • Allow users to identify changes in the multicast topology of their network by detecting changes in the RP mapping.

  • Provide traps to monitor the PIM protocol on PIM-enabled interfaces.

  • Help users identify routing issues when multicast neighbor adjacencies expire on a multicast interface.

  • Enable users to monitor RP configuration errors (for example, errors due to flapping in dynamic RP allocation protocols like Auto-RP).

How to Monitor and Maintain IP Multicast

Displaying Multicast Peers Packet Rates and Loss Information and Tracing a Path

Monitor IP multicast routing when you want to know which neighboring multicast routers are peering with the local router, what the multicast packet rates and loss information are, or when you want to trace the path from a source to a destination branch for a multicast distribution tree.

SUMMARY STEPS

  1. enable
  2. mrinfo [host-name | host-address ] [source-address | interface ]
  3. mstat {source-name | source-address } [destination-name | destination-address ] [group-name | group-address ]
  4. mtrace {source-name | source-address } [destination-name | destination-address ] [group-name | group-address ]

DETAILED STEPS

  Command or Action Purpose
Step 1

enable

Example:


Router> enable

Enables privileged EXEC mode.

  • Enter your password if prompted.

Step 2

mrinfo [host-name | host-address ] [source-address | interface ]

Example:


Router# mrinfo 

(Optional) Queries which neighboring multicast routers are “peering” with the local router.

Step 3

mstat {source-name | source-address } [destination-name | destination-address ] [group-name | group-address ]

Example:


Router# mstat allsource

(Optional) Displays IP multicast packet rate and loss information.

Step 4

mtrace {source-name | source-address } [destination-name | destination-address ] [group-name | group-address ]

Example:


Router# mtrace allsource

(Optional) Traces the path from a source to a destination branch for a multicast distribution tree.

Displaying IP Multicast System and Network Statistics

Display IP multicast system statistics to show the contents of the IP multicast routing table, information about interfaces configured for PIM, the PIM neighbors discovered by the router, contents of the IP fast-switching cache, and the contents of the circular cache header buffer.

SUMMARY STEPS

  1. enable
  2. ping [group-name | group-address ]
  3. show ip mroute [group-address | group-name ] [source-address | source-name ] [type number ] [summary ] [count ] [active kbps ]
  4. show ip pim interface [type number ] [df | count ] [rp-address ] [detail ]
  5. show ip pim neighbor [type number ]
  6. show ip pim rp [mapping | metric ] [rp-address ]
  7. show ip rpf {source-address | source-name } [metric ]

DETAILED STEPS

  Command or Action Purpose
Step 1

enable

Example:


Router> enable

Enables privileged EXEC mode.

  • Enter your password if prompted.

Step 2

ping [group-name | group-address ]

Example:


Router# ping cbone-audio

(Optional) Sends an ICMP echo request message to a multicast group address or group name.

Step 3

show ip mroute [group-address | group-name ] [source-address | source-name ] [type number ] [summary ] [count ] [active kbps ]

Example:


Router# show ip mroute cbone-audio

(Optional) Displays the contents of the IP multicast routing table.

Step 4

show ip pim interface [type number ] [df | count ] [rp-address ] [detail ]

Example:


Router# show ip pim interface gigabitethernet1/0/0 detail

(Optional) Displays information about interfaces configured for PIM.

Step 5

show ip pim neighbor [type number ]

Example:


Router# show ip pim neighbor 

(Optional) Lists the PIM neighbors discovered by the router.

Step 6

show ip pim rp [mapping | metric ] [rp-address ]

Example:


Router# show ip pim rp metric 

(Optional) Displays the RP routers associated with a sparse mode multicast group.

Step 7

show ip rpf {source-address | source-name } [metric ]

Example:


Router# show ip rpf 172.16.10.13 

(Optional) Displays how the router is doing RPF (that is, from the unicast routing table, DVMRP routing table, or static mroutes). Also displays the unicast routing metric.

Clearing IP Multicast Routing Table or Caches

Clear IP multicast caches and tables to delete entries from the IP multicast routing table, the Auto-RP cache, the IGMP cache, and the caches of Catalyst switches. When these entries are cleared, the information is refreshed by being relearned, thus eliminating any incorrect entries.

SUMMARY STEPS

  1. enable
  2. clear ip mroute {* | group-name [source-name | source-address ] | group-address [source-name | source-address ]}
  3. clear ip pim auto-rp rp-address
  4. clear ip igmp group [group-name | group-address | interface-type interface-number ]
  5. clear ip cgmp [interface-type interface-number ]

DETAILED STEPS

  Command or Action Purpose
Step 1

enable

Example:


Router> enable

Enables privileged EXEC mode.

  • Enter your password if prompted.

Step 2

clear ip mroute {* | group-name [source-name | source-address ] | group-address [source-name | source-address ]}

Example:


Router# clear ip mroute 224.2.205.42 228.3.0.0

(Optional) Deletes entries from the IP multicast routing table.

Step 3

clear ip pim auto-rp rp-address

Example:


Router# clear ip pim auto-rp 224.5.6.7 

(Optional) Clears the Auto-RP cache.

Step 4

clear ip igmp group [group-name | group-address | interface-type interface-number ]

Example:


Router# clear ip igmp group 224.0.255.1 

(Optional) Deletes entries from the IGMP cache.

Step 5

clear ip cgmp [interface-type interface-number ]

Example:


Router# clear ip cgmp 

(Optional) Clears all group entries from the caches of Catalyst switches.

Monitoring IP Multicast Delivery Using IP Multicast Heartbeat

SUMMARY STEPS

  1. enable
  2. configure terminal
  3. ip multicast-routing distributed
  4. snmp-server host {hostname | ip-address } [traps | informs ] [version {1 | 2c | 3 [auth | noauth | priv ]}] community-string [udp-port port ] [notification-type ]
  5. snmp-server enable traps ipmulticast
  6. ip multicast heartbeat group-address minimum-number window-size interval

DETAILED STEPS

  Command or Action Purpose
Step 1

enable

Example:


Router> enable

Enables privileged EXEC mode.

  • Enter your password if prompted.

Step 2

configure terminal

Example:


Router# configure terminal

Enters global configuration mode.

Step 3

ip multicast-routing distributed

Example:


Router(config)# ip multicast-routing distributed

Enables IP multicast routing.

Step 4

snmp-server host {hostname | ip-address } [traps | informs ] [version {1 | 2c | 3 [auth | noauth | priv ]}] community-string [udp-port port ] [notification-type ]

Example:


Router(config)# snmp-server host 224.1.0.1 traps public

Specifies the recipient of an SNMP notification operation.

Step 5

snmp-server enable traps ipmulticast

Example:


Router(config)# snmp-server enable traps ipmulticast 

Enables the router to send IP multicast traps.

Step 6

ip multicast heartbeat group-address minimum-number window-size interval

Example:


Router(config)# ip multicast heartbeat 224.1.1.1 1 1 10

Enables the monitoring of the IP multicast packet delivery.

  • The interval should be set to a multiple of 10 seconds on platforms that use Multicast Distributed Fast Switching (MDFS) because on those platforms, the packet counters are only updated once every 10 seconds. Other platforms may have other increments.

Advertising Multicast Multimedia Sessions Using SAP Listener

Enable SAP listener support when you want to use session description and announcement protocols and applications to assist the advertisement of multicast multimedia conferences and other multicast sessions and to communicate the relevant session setup information to prospective participants.

SUMMARY STEPS

  1. enable
  2. configure terminal
  3. ip sap cache-timeout minutes
  4. interface type number
  5. ip sap listen
  6. end
  7. clear ip sap [group-address | session-name ]
  8. show ip sap [group-address | session-name | detail ]

DETAILED STEPS

  Command or Action Purpose
Step 1

enable

Example:


Router> enable

Enables privileged EXEC mode.

  • Enter your password if prompted.

Step 2

configure terminal

Example:


Router# configure terminal

Enters global configuration mode.

Step 3

ip sap cache-timeout minutes

Example:


Router(config)# ip sap cache-timeout 600

(Optional) Limits how long a SAP cache entry stays active in the cache.

  • By default, SAP cache entries are deleted 24 hours after they are received from the network.

Step 4

interface type number

Example:


Router(config)# interface gigabitethernet 1/0/0

Selects an interface that is connected to hosts on which IGMPv3 can be enabled.

Step 5

ip sap listen

Example:


Router(config-if)# ip sap listen

Enables the Cisco IOS XE software to listen to session directory announcements.

Step 6

end

Example:


Router(config-if)# end

Ends the session and returns to EXEC mode.

Step 7

clear ip sap [group-address | session-name ]

Example:


Router# clear ip sap "Sample Session" 

Deletes a SAP cache entry or the entire SAP cache.

Step 8

show ip sap [group-address | session-name | detail ]

Example:


Router# show ip sap 224.2.197.250 detail

(Optional) Displays the SAP cache.

Disabling Fast Switching of IP Multicast

Disable fast switching if you want to log debug messages, because when fast switching is enabled, debug messages are not logged.

You might also want to disable fast switching, which places the router in process switching, if packets are not reaching their destinations. If fast switching is disabled and packets are reaching their destinations, then switching may be the cause.

Fast switching of IP multicast packets is enabled by default on all interfaces (including generic routing encapsulation [GRE] and DVMRP tunnels), with one exception: It is disabled and not supported over X.25 encapsulated interfaces. The following are properties of fast switching:

  • If fast switching is disabled on an incoming interface for a multicast routing table entry, the packet is sent at process level for all interfaces in the outgoing interface list.

  • If fast switching is disabled on an outgoing interface for a multicast routing table entry, the packet is process-level switched for that interface, but may be fast switched for other interfaces in the outgoing interface list.

  • When fast switching is enabled, debug messages are not logged.

SUMMARY STEPS

  1. enable
  2. configure terminal
  3. interface type number
  4. no ip mroute-cache

DETAILED STEPS

  Command or Action Purpose
Step 1

enable

Example:


Router> enable

Enables privileged EXEC mode.

  • Enter your password if prompted.

Step 2

configure terminal

Example:


Router# configure terminal

Enters global configuration mode.

Step 3

interface type number

Example:


Router(config)# interface gigabitethernet 1/0/0

Specifies an interface.

Step 4

no ip mroute-cache

Example:


Router(config-if)# no ip mroute-cache

Disables fast switching of IP multicast.

Enabling PIM MIB Extensions for IP Multicast

Perform this task to enable PIM MIB extensions for IP multicast.


Note

  • The pimInterfaceVersion object was removed from RFC 2934 and, therefore, is no longer supported in software.
  • The following MIB tables are not supported in Cisco software:
    • pimIpMRouteTable
    • pimIpMRouteNextHopTable

SUMMARY STEPS

  1. enable
  2. configure terminal
  3. snmp-server enable traps pim [neighbor-change | rp-mapping-change | invalid-pim-message ]
  4. snmp-server host host-address [traps | informs ] community-string pim

DETAILED STEPS

  Command or Action Purpose
Step 1

enable

Example:


Device> enable

Enables privileged EXEC mode.

  • Enter your password if prompted.

Step 2

configure terminal

Example:


Device# configure terminal

Enters global configuration mode.

Step 3

snmp-server enable traps pim [neighbor-change | rp-mapping-change | invalid-pim-message ]

Example:


Device(config)# snmp-server enable traps pim neighbor-change 

Enables a device to send PIM notifications.

  • neighbor-change --This keyword enables notifications indicating when a device’s PIM interface is disabled or enabled, or when a device’s PIM neighbor adjacency expires.

  • rp-mapping-change --This keyword enables notifications indicating a change in RP mapping information due to either Auto-RP messages or BSR messages.

  • invalid-pim-message --This keyword enables notifications for monitoring invalid PIM protocol operations (for example, when a device receives a join or prune message for which the RP specified in the packet is not the RP for the multicast group or when a device receives a register message from a multicast group for which it is not the RP).

Step 4

snmp-server host host-address [traps | informs ] community-string pim

Example:


Device(config)# snmp-server host 10.10.10.10 traps public pim 

Specifies the recipient of a PIM SNMP notification operation.

Configuration Examples for Monitoring and Maintaining IP Multicast

Displaying IP Multicast System and Network Statistics Example

The following is sample output from the mrinfo command:


Router# mrinfo
 
192.31.7.37 (labs-allcompany) [version cisco 12.3] [flags: PMSA]: 
192.31.7.37 -> 192.31.7.34 (lab-southwest) [1/0/pim] 
192.31.7.37 -> 192.31.7.47 (lab-northwest) [1/0/pim] 
192.31.7.37 -> 192.31.7.44 (lab-southeast) [1/0/pim] 
131.119.26.10 -> 131.119.26.9 (lab-northeast) [1/32/pim] 

The following is sample output from the mstat command in user EXEC mode:


Router> mstat labs-in-china 172.16.0.1 224.0.255.255
 
Type escape sequence to abort. 
Mtrace from 172.16.0.0 to 172.16.0.10 via group 224.0.255.255 
>From source (labs-in-china) to destination (labs-in-africa) 
Waiting to accumulate statistics...... 
Results after 10 seconds: 
Source Response Dest Packet Statistics For Only For Traffic 
172.16.0.0      172.16.0.10 All Multicast Traffic From 172.16.0.0 
| __/ rtt 48 ms Lost/Sent = Pct Rate To 224.0.255.255 
v / hop 48 ms --------------------- -------------------- 
172.16.0.1      labs-in-england 
| ^ ttl 1 
v | hop 31 ms 0/12 = 0% 1 pps 0/1 = --% 0 pps 
172.16.0.2 
172.16.0.3 	 infolabs.com
| ^ ttl 2 
v | hop -17 ms -735/12 = --% 1 pps 0/1 = --% 0 pps 
172.16.0.4 
172.16.0.5      infolabs2.com 
| ^ ttl 3 
v | hop -21 ms -678/23 = --% 2 pps 0/1 = --% 0 pps 
172.16.0.6 
172.16.0.7      infolabs3.com 
| ^ ttl 4 
v | hop 5 ms 605/639 = 95% 63 pps 1/1 = --% 0 pps 
172.16.0.8 
172.16.0.9      infolabs.cisco.com 
| \__ ttl 5 
v \ hop 0 ms 4 0 pps 0 0 pps 
172.16.0.0      172.16.0.10 
Receiver Query Source 

The following is sample output from the mtrace command in user EXEC mode:


Router> mtrace 172.16.0.0 172.16.0.10 239.254.254.254 
Type escape sequence to abort. 
Mtrace from 172.16.0.0 to 172.16.0.10 via group 239.254.254.254 
From source (?) to destination (?) 
Querying full reverse path... 
0 172.16.0.10 
-1 172.16.0.8 PIM thresh^ 0 0 ms 
-2 172.16.0.6 PIM thresh^ 0 2 ms 
-3 172.16.0.5 PIM thresh^ 0 894 ms 
-4 172.16.0.3 PIM thresh^ 0 893 ms 
-5 172.16.0.2 PIM thresh^ 0 894 ms 
-6 172.16.0.1 PIM thresh^ 0 893 ms 

Monitoring IP Multicast Delivery Using IP Multicast Heartbeat Example

The following example shows how to monitor IP multicast packets forwarded through this router to group address 244.1.1.1. If no packet for this group is received in a 10-second interval, an SNMP trap will be sent to the SNMP management station with the IP address of 224.1.0.1.


! 
ip multicast-routing 
! 
snmp-server host 224.1.0.1 traps public 
snmp-server enable traps ipmulticast 
ip multicast heartbeat 224.1.1.1 1 1 10 

Advertising Multicast Multimedia Sessions Using SAP Listener Example

The following example enables a router to listen to session directory announcements and changes the SAP cache timeout to 30 minutes.


ip multicast routing 
ip sap cache-timeout 30 
interface loopback 0 
 ip address 10.0.0.51 255.255.255.0 
 ip pim sparse-dense mode 
 ip sap listen 

The following is sample output from the show ip sap command for a session using multicast group 224.2.197.250:


Router# show ip sap 224.2.197.250 
SAP Cache - 198 entries 
Session Name: Session1 
   Description: This broadcast is brought to you courtesy of Name1. 
   Group: 0.0.0.0, ttl: 0, Contiguous allocation: 1 
   Lifetime: from 10:00:00 PDT Jul 4 1999 until 10:00:00 PDT Aug 1 1999 
   Uptime: 4d05h, Last Heard: 00:01:40 
   Announcement source: 128.102.84.134 
   Created by: sample 3136541828 3139561476 IN IP4 128.102.84.134 
   Phone number: Sample Digital Video Lab (555) 555-5555 
   Email: email1 <name@email.com> 
   URL: http://url.com/ 
   Media: audio 20890 RTP/AVP 0 
     Media group: 224.2.197.250, ttl: 127 
     Attribute: ptime:40 
   Media: video 62806 RTP/AVP 31 
     Media group: 224.2.190.243, ttl: 127 

Displaying IP Multicast System and Network Statistics Example

show ip mroute

The following is sample output from the show ip mroute command for a router operating in sparse mode:


Router# show ip mroute
 
IP Multicast Routing Table 
Flags: D - Dense, S - Sparse, B - Bidir Group, s - SSM Group, C - Connected, 
       L - Local, P - Pruned, R - RP-bit set, F - Register flag, 
       T - SPT-bit set, J - Join SPT, M - MSDP created entry, 
       X - Proxy Join Timer Running, A - Candidate for MSDP Advertisement, 
       U - URD, I - Received Source Specific Host Report, Z - Multicast Tunnel, 
       Y - Joined MDT-data group, y - Sending to MDT-data group 
Timers: Uptime/Expires 
Interface state: Interface, Next-Hop, State/Mode 
(*, 224.0.255.3), uptime 5:29:15, RP is 192.168.37.2, flags: SC 
  Incoming interface: Tunnel0, RPF neighbor 10.3.35.1, Dvmrp 
  Outgoing interface list: 
    GigabitEthernet0, Forward/Sparse, 5:29:15/0:02:57 
(192.168.46.0/24, 224.0.255.3), uptime 5:29:15, expires 0:02:59, flags: C 
  Incoming interface: Tunnel0, RPF neighbor 10.3.35.1 
  Outgoing interface list: 
	GigabitEthernet0, Forward/Sparse, 5:29:15/0:02:57 

show ip pim interface

The following is sample output from the show ip pim interface command when an interface is specified:


Router# show ip pim interface GigabitEthernet1/0/0
 
Address          Interface                Ver/   Nbr    Query  DR     DR 
                                          Mode   Count  Intvl  Prior 
172.16.1.4       GigabitEthernet1/0/0     v2/S   1      100 ms 1      172.16.1.4 

The following is sample output from the show ip pim rp command:


Router# show ip pim rp
 
Group:227.7.7.7, RP:10.10.0.2, v2, v1, next RP-reachable in 00:00:48 

show ip pim rp

The following is sample output from the show ip pim rp command when the mapping keyword is specified:


Router# show ip pim rp mapping 
PIM Group-to-RP Mappings 
This system is an RP (Auto-RP) 
This system is an RP-mapping agent 
Group(s) 227.0.0.0/8 
  RP 10.10.0.2 (?), v2v1, bidir 
    Info source:10.10.0.2 (?), via Auto-RP 
         Uptime:00:01:42, expires:00:00:32 
Group(s) 228.0.0.0/8 
  RP 10.10.0.3 (?), v2v1, bidir 
    Info source:10.10.0.3 (?), via Auto-RP 
         Uptime:00:01:26, expires:00:00:34 
Group(s) 229.0.0.0/8 
  RP 10.10.0.5 (mcast1.cisco.com), v2v1, bidir 
    Info source:10.10.0.5 (mcast1.cisco.com), via Auto-RP 
         Uptime:00:00:52, expires:00:00:37 
Group(s) (-)230.0.0.0/8 
  RP 10.10.0.5 (mcast1.cisco.com), v2v1, bidir 
    Info source:10.10.0.5 (mcast1.cisco.com), via Auto-RP 
         Uptime:00:00:52, expires:00:00:37 

The following is sample output from the show ip pim rp command when the metric keyword is specified:


Router# show ip pim rp metric
 
RP Address      Metric Pref    Metric       Flags   RPF Type   Interface 
10.10.0.2       0              0              L     unicast    Loopback0 
10.10.0.3       90             409600         L     unicast    GigabitEthernet3/3/0 
10.10.0.5       90             435200         L     unicast    GigabitEthernet3/3/0 

show ip rpf

The following is sample output from the show ip rpf command:


Router# show ip rpf 172.16.10.13
 
RPF information for host1 (172.16.10.13) 
  RPF interface: BRI0 
  RPF neighbor: sj1.cisco.com (172.16.121.10) 
  RPF route/mask: 172.16.0.0/255.255.0.0 
  RPF type: unicast 
  RPF recursion count: 0 
  Doing distance-preferred lookups across tables 

The following is sample output from the show ip rpf command when the metric keyword is specified:


Router# show ip rpf 172.16.10.13 metric 
RPF information for host1.cisco.com (172.16.10.13) 
  RPF interface: BRI0 
  RPF neighbor: neighbor.cisco.com (172.16.121.10) 
  RPF route/mask: 172.16.0.0/255.255.0.0 
  RPF type: unicast 
  RPF recursion count: 0 
  Doing distance-preferred lookups across tables 
  Metric preference: 110 

Enabling PIM MIB Extensions for IP Multicast Example

The following example shows how to configure a router to generate notifications indicating that a PIM interface of the router has been enabled. The first line configures PIM traps to be sent as SNMP v2c traps to the host with IP address 10.0.0.1. The second line configures the router to send the neighbor-change class of trap notification to the host.


snmp-server host 10.0.0.1 traps version 2c public pim 
snmp-server enable traps pim neighbor-change 
interface ethernet0/0 
 ip pim sparse-dense-mode 

Additional References

Related Documents

Related Topic

Document Title

Cisco IOS commands

Cisco IOS Master Commands List, All Releases

Cisco IOS IP SLAs commands

Cisco IOS IP Multicast Command Reference

Standards and RFCs

Standard/RFC

Title

RFC 2934

Protocol Independent Multicast for IPv4 MIB

MIBs

MIB

MIBs Link

  • CISCO-IPMROUTE-MIB

  • MSDP-MIB

  • IGMP-STD-MIB

To locate and download MIBs for selected platforms, Cisco IOS XE releases, and feature sets, use Cisco MIB Locator found at the following URL:

http://www.cisco.com/go/mibs

Technical Assistance

Description

Link

The Cisco Support and Documentation website provides online resources to download documentation, software, and tools. Use these resources to install and configure the software and to troubleshoot and resolve technical issues with Cisco products and technologies. Access to most tools on the Cisco Support and Documentation website requires a Cisco.com user ID and password.

http://www.cisco.com/cisco/web/support/index.html

Feature Information for Monitoring and Maintaining IP Multicast

The following table provides release information about the feature or features described in this module. This table lists only the software release that introduced support for a given feature in a given software release train. Unless noted otherwise, subsequent releases of that software release train also support that feature.

Use Cisco Feature Navigator to find information about platform support and Cisco software image support. To access Cisco Feature Navigator, go to www.cisco.com/go/cfn. An account on Cisco.com is not required.
Table 1. Feature Information for Monitoring and Maintaining IP Multicast

Feature Names

Releases

Feature Configuration Information

PIM MIB Extensions

Cisco IOS XE Release 2.1

Protocol Independent Multicast (PIM) is an IP multicast routing protocol used for routing multicast data packets to multicast groups. RFC 2934 defines the PIM for IPv4 MIB, which describes managed objects that enable users to remotely monitor and configure PIM using Simple Network Management Protocol (SNMP).

Multicast Heartbeat

Cisco IOS XE Release 2.1

The IP multicast heartbeat feature provides a way to monitor the status of IP multicast delivery and be informed when the delivery fails (via Simple Network Management Protocol [SNMP] traps).