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CMU-CS-00-120
Computer Science Department
School of Computer Science, Carnegie Mellon University
CMU-CS-00-120
REUNITE: A Recursive Unicast Approach to Multicast
Ion Stoica, T.S. Eugene Ng, Hui Zhang
March 2000
CMU-CS-00-120.ps
CMU-CS-00-120.pdf
Keywords: Multicast routing, state reduction, incremental
deployment, load balancing
We propose a new multicast protocol called REUNITE. The key idea of
REUNITE is to use recursive unicast trees to implement multicast
service. REUNITE does not use class D IP addresses. Instead, both
group identification and data forwarding are based on unicast IP
addresses. Compared with existing IP multicast protocols, REUNITE has
several unique properties. First, only routers that are acting as
multicast tree branching points for a group need to keep multicast
forwarding state of the group. All other non-branching-point routers
simply forward data packets by unicast routing. In addition, REUNITE
can be incrementally deployed in the sense that it works even if only
a subset of the routers implement the protocol. Furthermore, REUNITE
supports load balancing and graceful degradation such that when a
router does not have resources (forwarding table entry, buffer space,
processing power) to support additional multicast groups, the
branching can be automatically migrated to other less loaded
routers. Finally, sender access control can be easily supported in
REUNITE. Although in REUNITE, routers in a multicast tree still need
to maintain control path state, we discuss a variant of REUNITE in
which routers do not need to maintain any control path state.
However, this is achieved at the expense of having two additional
protocol message types, and a slightly more complex protocol.
30 pages
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