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rfc:rfc988

Network Working Group S. E. Deering Request for Comments: 988 Stanford University

                                                             July 1986
                Host Extensions for IP Multicasting

1. STATUS OF THIS MEMO

 This memo specifies the extensions required of a host implementation
 of the Internet Protocol (IP) to support internetwork multicasting.
 This specification supersedes that given in RFC-966, and constitutes
 a proposed protocol standard for IP multicasting in the
 ARPA-Internet.  The reader is directed to RFC-966 for a discussion of
 the motivation and rationale behind the multicasting extension
 specified here.  Distribution of this memo is unlimited.

2. INTRODUCTION

 IP multicasting is defined as the transmission of an IP datagram to a
 "host group", a set of zero or more hosts identified by a single IP
 destination address.  A multicast datagram is delivered to all
 members of its destination host group with the same "best-efforts"
 reliability as regular unicast IP datagrams, i.e. the datagram is not
 guaranteed to arrive at all members of the destination group or in
 the same order relative to other datagrams.
 The membership of a host group is dynamic; that is, hosts may join
 and leave groups at any time.  There is no restriction on the
 location or number of members in a host group, but membership in a
 group may be restricted to only those hosts possessing a private
 access key.  A host may be a member of more than one group at a time.
 A host need not be a member of a group to send datagrams to it.
 A host group may be permanent or transient.  A permanent group has a
 well-known, administratively assigned IP address.  It is the address,
 not the membership of the group, that is permanent; at any time a
 permanent group may have any number of members, even zero.  A
 transient group, on the other hand, is assigned an address
 dynamically when the group is created, at the request of a host.  A
 transient group ceases to exist, and its address becomes eligible for
 reassignment, when its membership drops to zero.
 The creation of transient groups and the maintenance of group
 membership information is the responsibility of "multicast agents",
 entities that reside in internet gateways or other special-purpose
 hosts.  There is at least one multicast agent directly attached to
 every IP network or subnetwork that supports IP multicasting.  A host
 requests the creation of new groups, and joins or leaves existing
 groups, by exchanging messages with a neighboring agent.

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RFC 988 July 1986 Host Extensions for IP Multicasting

 Multicast agents are also responsible for internetwork delivery of
 multicast IP datagrams.  When sending a multicast IP datagram, a host
 transmits it to a local network multicast address which identifies
 all neighboring members of the destination host group.  If the group
 has members on other networks, a multicast agent becomes an
 additional recipient of the local multicast and relays the datagram
 to agents on each of those other networks, via the internet gateway
 system.  Finally, the agents on the other networks each transmit the
 datagram as a local multicast to their own neighboring members of the
 destination group.
 This memo specifies the extensions required of a host IP
 implementation to support IP multicasting, where a "host" is any
 internet host or gateway other than those serving as multicast
 agents.  The algorithms and protocols used within and between
 multicast agents are transparent to non-agent hosts and will be
 specified in a separate document.  This memo also does not specify
 how local network multicasting is accomplished for all types of
 network, although it does specify the required service interface to
 an arbitrary local network and gives an Ethernet specification as an
 example.  Specifications for other types of network will be the
 subject of future memos.

3. LEVELS OF CONFORMANCE

 There are three levels of conformance to this specification:
 Level 0: no support for IP multicasting.
    There is, at this time, no requirement that all IP implementations
    support IP multicasting.  Level 0 hosts will, in general, be
    unaffected by multicast activity.  The only exception arises on
    some types of local network, where the presence of level 1 or 2
    hosts may cause misdelivery of multicast IP datagrams to level 0
    hosts.  Such datagrams can easily be identified by the presence of
    a class D IP address in their destination address field; they
    should be quietly discarded by hosts that do not support IP
    multicasting.  Class D addresses are defined in section 4 of this
    memo.

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 Level 1: support for sending but not receiving multicast IP
 datagrams.
    Level 1 allows a host to partake of some multicast-based services,
    such as resource location or status reporting, but it does not
    allow a host to create or join any host groups.  An IP
    implementation may be upgraded from level 0 to level 1 very easily
    and with little new code.  Only sections 4, 5, and 6 of this memo
    are applicable to level 1 implementations.
 Level 2: full support for IP multicasting.
    Level 2 allows a host to create, join and leave host groups, as
    well as send IP datagrams to host groups.  It requires
    implementation of the Internet Group Management Protocol (IGMP)
    and extension of the IP and local network service interfaces
    within the host.  All of the following sections of this memo are
    applicable to level 2 implementations.

4. HOST GROUP ADDRESSES

 Host groups are identified by class D IP addresses, i.e. those with
 "1110" as their high-order four bits.  The remaining 28 bits are
 unstructured as far as hosts are concerned.  The addresses of
 well-known, permanent groups are to be published in "Assigned
 Numbers". Class E IP addresses, i.e. those with "1111" as their
 high-order four bits, are reserved for future addressing modes.
 Appendix II contains some background discussion of several issues
 related to host group addresses.

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5. MODEL OF A HOST IP IMPLEMENTATION

 The multicast extensions to a host IP implementation are specified in
 terms of the layered model illustrated below.  In this model, ICMP
 and (for level 2 hosts) IGMP are considered to be implemented within
 the IP module, and the mapping of IP addresses to local network
 addresses is considered to be the responsibility of local network
 modules.  This model is for expository purposes only, and should not
 be construed as constraining an actual implementation.
    |                                                          |    
    |              Upper-Layer Protocol Modules                |    
    |__________________________________________________________|    
                                  
 --------------------- IP Service Interface ----------------------- 
     __________________________________________________________     
    |                            |              |              |    
    |                            |     ICMP     |     IGMP     |    
    |             IP             |______________|______________|    
    |           Module                                         |    
    |                                                          |    
    |__________________________________________________________|    
                                  
 ---------------- Local Network Service Interface ----------------- 
     __________________________________________________________     
    |                            |                             |    
    |           Local            | IP-to-local address mapping |    
    |          Network           |         (e.g. ARP)          |    
    |          Modules           |_____________________________|    
    |      (e.g. Ethernet)                                     |    
    |                                                          |    
 To support level 2 IP multicasting, a host IP implementation must
 provide three new services:  (1) sending multicast IP datagrams, (2)
 receiving multicast IP datagrams, and (3) managing group membership.
 Only the first service need be provided in level 1 hosts.  Each of
 these services is described in a separate section, below.  For each
 service, extensions are specified for the IP service interface, the
 IP module, the local network service interface, and an Ethernet local
 network module.  Extensions to local network modules other than
 Ethernet are mentioned briefly, but are not specified in detail.

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6. SENDING MULTICAST IP DATAGRAMS

 6.1. Extensions to the IP Service Interface
    No change to the IP service interface is required to support the
    sending of multicast IP datagrams.  An upper-layer protocol module
    merely specifies an IP host group destination, rather than an
    individual IP destination, when it invokes the existing "Send IP"
    operation.
 6.2. Extensions to the IP Module
    To support the sending of multicast IP datagrams, the IP module
    must be extended to recognize IP host group addresses when routing
    outgoing datagrams.  Most IP implementations include the following
    logic:
       if IP-destination is on the same local network,
          send datagram locally to IP-destination
       else
          send datagram locally to GatewayTo(IP-destination)
    To allow multicast transmissions, the routing logic must be
    changed to:
       if IP-destination is on the same local network
       or IP-destination is a host group,
          send datagram locally to IP-destination
       else
          send datagram locally to GatewayTo(IP-destination)
    If the sending host is itself a member of the destination group, a
    copy of the outgoing datagram must be looped-back for local
    delivery if and only if loopback was requested when the host
    joined the group (see section 8.1).  (This issue does not arise in
    level 1 implementations.)
    On hosts attached to more than one network, each multicast IP
    datagram must be transmitted via one network interface only,
    leaving it to the multicast agents to effect delivery to any other
    required networks.
    A host group address should not be placed in the source address
    field of an outgoing IP datagram.  A host group address may be
    used in a source routing option as the last element only.
    It should be noted that a small IP time-to-live (TTL) value can

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    prevent delivery to some members of a destination group.  Thus, a
    large TTL value should be used to reach all members.  Conversely,
    a small TTL value can be used to advantage to reach only "nearby"
    members of a widely-dispersed group.  In clusters of low-delay
    local area networks, the TTL field acts as a hop limit; thus, one
    can perform expanding-ring searches by starting with a TTL of 1
    and incrementing on each retransmission, up to some limit defined
    by the diameter of the cluster.
 6.3. Extensions to the Local Network Service Interface
    No change to the local network service interface is required to
    support the sending of multicast IP datagrams.  The IP module
    merely specifies an IP host group destination, rather than an
    individual IP destination, when it invokes the existing "Send
    Local" operation.
 6.4. Extensions to an Ethernet Local Network Module
    The Ethernet directly supports the sending of local multicast
    packets by allowing multicast addresses in the destination field
    of Ethernet packets.  All that is needed to support the sending of
    multicast IP datagrams is a procedure for mapping IP host group
    addresses to Ethernet multicast addresses.
    An IP host group address is mapped to an Ethernet multicast
    address by placing the low-order 28-bits of the IP address into
    the low-order 28 bits of an Ethernet address.  The high-order 20
    bits of the Ethernet address are set to a well-known value, to be
    published in "Assigned Numbers".
    [At time of publication of this memo, a block of Ethernet
    multicast addresses with 28 unspecified bits had not yet been
    obtained from the allocating authority.  If such a block of
    addresses cannot be obtained, an alternative mapping scheme will
    be specified.]
 6.5. Extensions to Local Network Modules other than Ethernet
    Other networks that directly support multicasting, such as rings
    or buses conforming to the IEEE 802.2 standard, can be handled the
    same way as Ethernet for the purpose of sending multicast IP
    datagrams.  For a network that supports broadcast but not
    multicast, such as the Experimental Ethernet, all IP host group
    addresses can be mapped to a single local broadcast address (at
    the cost of increased overhead on all local hosts).  For a
    point-to-point networks like the ARPANET or a public data network

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    (X.25), all IP host group addresses might be mapped to the
    well-known local address of an IP multicast agent; an agent on
    such a network would take responsibility for completing multicast
    delivery within the network as well as among networks.

7. RECEIVING MULTICAST IP DATAGRAMS

 7.1. Extensions to the IP Service Interface
    No change to the IP service interface is required to support the
    reception of multicast IP datagrams.  Incoming multicast IP
    datagrams are delivered to upper-layer protocol modules using the
    same "Receive IP" operation as normal, unicast datagrams.
 7.2. Extensions to the IP Module
    To support the reception of multicast IP datagrams, the IP module
    must be extended to recognize the addresses of IP host groups to
    which the host currently belongs, in addition to the host's
    individual IP address(es).  An incoming datagram destined to one
    of those group addresses is processed exactly the same way as
    datagrams destined to one of the host's individual addresses.
    Incoming datagrams destined to groups to which the host does not
    belong are discarded without generating any error report.
    On hosts attached to more than one network, if a datagram arrives
    via one network interface, destined for a group to which the host
    belongs only on a different interface, the datagram is quietly
    discarded.  (This should occur only as a result of inadequate
    multicast address filtering in the local network module.)
    An incoming datagram is not rejected for having an IP host group
    address in its source address field or anywhere in a source
    routing option.
    An ICMP error message (Destination Unreachable, Time Exceeded,
    Parameter Problem, Source Quench, or Redirect) is never generated
    in response to a datagram destined to an IP host group.
 7.3. Extensions to the Local Network Service Interface
    No change to the local network service interface is required to
    support the reception of multicast IP datagrams.  Incoming local
    network packets, whether multicast or unicast, are delivered to
    the IP module using the same "Receive Local" operation.

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 7.4. Extensions to an Ethernet Local Network Module
    To support the reception of multicast IP datagrams, an Ethernet
    module must be able to receive packets addressed to the Ethernet
    multicast addresses that correspond to the host's IP host group
    addresses.  It is highly desirable to take advantage of any
    address filtering capabilities that the Ethernet hardware
    interface may have, so that the host only receives packets that
    are destined to it.
    Unfortunately, many current Ethernet interfaces have a small limit
    on the number of addresses that the hardware can be configured to
    recognize.  However, an implementation must be capable of
    listening on an arbitrary number of Ethernet multicast addresses,
    which may mean "opening up" the address filter to accept all
    multicast packets during those periods when the number of
    addresses exceeds the limit of the filter.
    For interfaces with inadequate hardware address filtering, it may
    be desirable (for performance reasons) to perform Ethernet address
    filtering within the software of the Ethernet module.  This is not
    mandatory, however, because the IP module performs its own
    filtering based on IP destination addresses.
 7.5. Extensions to Local Network Modules other than Ethernet
    Other multicast networks, such as IEEE 802.2 networks, can be
    handled the same way as Ethernet for the purpose of receiving
    multicast IP datagrams.  For pure broadcast networks, such as the
    Experimental Ethernet, all incoming broadcast packets can be
    accepted and passed to the IP module for IP-level filtering.  On a
    point-to-point network, multicast IP datagrams will arrive as
    local network unicasts, so no change to the local network module
    should be necessary.

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8. MANAGING GROUP MEMBERSHIP

 8.1. Extensions to the IP Service Interface
    To allow upper-layer protocol modules to request that their host
    create, join, or leave a host group, the IP service interface must
    be extended to offer the following three new operations:
       CreateGroup ( private, loopback )
                                --> outcome, group-address, access-key
    The CreateGroup operation requests the creation of a new,
    transient host group, with this host as its only member.  The
    "private" argument specifies if the group is to be private or
    public.  The "loopback" argument specifies whether or not
    datagrams sent from this host to the group should be delivered
    locally as well as to other member hosts.  The "outcome" result
    indicates whether the request is granted or denied.  If it is
    granted, a new 32-bit IP host group address is returned, along
    with a 64-bit access key which is zero for public groups and
    non-zero for private groups.  The request may be denied due to
    lack of response from a multicast agent, or lack of resources.
       JoinGroup ( group-address, access-key, loopback ) --> outcome
    The JoinGroup operation requests that this host become a member of
    the host group identified by "group-address", with the specified
    access key. The "loopback" argument specifies whether or not
    datagrams sent from this host to the group should be delivered
    locally as well as to other member hosts.  The "outcome" result
    indicates whether the request is granted or denied.  The request
    may be denied due to lack of response from a multicast agent, lack
    of resources, an invalid group address, an incorrect access key,
    or already being a member.
       LeaveGroup ( group-address, access-key ) --> outcome
    The LeaveGroup operation requests that this host give up its
    membership in the host group identified by "group-address", with
    the specified access key.  The "outcome" result indicates whether
    the request is granted or denied.  The request may be denied due
    to an invalid group address, an incorrect access key, or not
    currently being a member.
    Each of these operations may take up to a minute or more to
    complete, depending on the number of IGMP retransmissions

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    performed within the IP module, and time required for a multicast
    agent to generate a reply. However, typical delays should be on
    the order of a few seconds.
    Besides the LeaveGroup operation, a host loses its membership in a
    group whenever the host or its IP module crashes, or, in rare
    circumstances, when a multicast agent revokes its membership.  The
    IP service interface should provide some means of informing an
    upper-layer module when its membership has been revoked.
    Membership may be revoked due to lack of resources, deallocation
    of the group address, or the discovery of another host group using
    the same group address with a different access key.  (See Appendix
    II for discussion of address recycling issues.)
    It is important to observe that IP group membership is per-host,
    rather than per-process.  An IP service interface should not allow
    multiple processes to invoke JoinGroup operations for the same
    group as a way of achieving delivery to more than process.  The IP
    module delivers each incoming datagram, whether multicast or
    unicast, to the single upper-layer protocol module identified by
    the protocol field in the datagram's IP header; it is an
    upper-layer issue whether or not to deliver incoming datagrams to
    more than one process, perhaps using the concept of "process
    groups" or "shared ports".
 8.2. Extensions to the IP Module
    Within the IP module, the membership management operations are
    supported by the Internet Group Management Protocol (IGMP),
    specified in Appendix I. As well as having messages corresponding
    to each of the operations specified above, IGMP also specifies a
    "deadman timer" procedure whereby hosts periodically confirm their
    memberships with the multicast agents.
    The IP module must maintain a data structure listing the IP
    addresses of all host groups to which the host currently belongs,
    along with each group's loopback policy, access key, and timer
    variables.  This data structure is used by the IP multicast
    transmission service to know which outgoing datagrams to loop
    back, and by the reception service to know which incoming
    datagrams to accept.  The purpose of IGMP and the management
    interface operations is to maintain this data structure.
    On hosts attached to more than one network, each membership is
    associated with a particular network interface.  On such a host
    the management interface operations above may each require an
    additional parameter specifying to which interface the create,

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    join, or leave request applies.  The group membership data
    structure must also be extended to associate an interface with
    each membership.  If a host joins the same host group on more than
    one network interface, it can expect to receive multiple copies of
    each datagram sent to that group.
 8.3. Extensions to the Local Network Service Interface
    To allow an IP module to control what packets should be accepted
    by the local network module, it is necessary to extend the local
    network service interface with the following two new operations:
       AcceptAddress ( group-address )
       RejectAddress ( group-address )
    where "group-address" is an IP host group address.  The
    AcceptAddress operation requests the local network module to
    accept and deliver up subsequently arriving packets destined to
    the local network address corresponding to "group-address".  The
    RejectAddress operation requests the local network module to stop
    delivering up packets destined to the local network address
    corresponding to "group-address".
    Any local network module is free to ignore RejectAddress requests,
    and may deliver up packets destined to more addresses than just
    those specified in AcceptAddress requests, if it is unable to
    filter incoming packets adequately.
 8.4. Extensions to an Ethernet Local Network Module
    An Ethernet module responds to AcceptAddress operations by adding
    the corresponding Ethernet multicast address to its acceptance
    filter for incoming packets.  A RejectAddress operation causes the
    corresponding Ethernet address to be dropped from the filter.  For
    Ethernet interfaces with a limit on the number of addresses that
    can be added to the filter, the Ethernet software module must
    detect when that threshold is exceeded and open up the filter to
    accept all multicast packets.  It should also detect when the
    number of addresses drops below the threshold and revert to
    individual address filtering.
 8.5. Extensions to Local Network Modules other than Ethernet
    Other multicast networks, such as IEEE 802.2 networks, can be
    handled the same way as Ethernet for the purpose of controlling
    address filtering.  For a pure broadcast network or a

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    point-to-point network, the AcceptAddress and RejectAddress
    operations may have no effect; all incoming packets could be
    passed to the IP module for IP-level filtering.

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APPENDIX I. INTERNET GROUP MANAGEMENT PROTOCOL (IGMP)

 The Internet Group Management Protocol (IGMP) is used between IP
 hosts and their immediate neighbor multicast agents to support the
 creation of transient groups, the addition and deletion of members of
 a group, and the periodic confirmation of group membership.  IGMP is
 an asymmetric protocol and is specified here from the point of view
 of a host, rather than a multicast agent.
 Like ICMP, IGMP is a integral part of IP.  It is required to be
 implemented in full by all hosts conforming to level 2 of the IP
 multicasting specification.  IGMP messages are encapsulated in IP
 datagrams, with an IP protocol number of 2.  All IGMP messages have
 the following format:
  0                   1                   2                   3    
  0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1  
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ 
 |     Type      |     Code      |           Checksum            | 
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ 
 |                          Identifier                           | 
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ 
 |                         Group Address                         | 
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ 
 |                                                               | 
 +                         Access Key                            + 
 |                                                               | 
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ 
 Type
    There are eight types of IGMP message:
       1 = Create Group Request
       2 = Create Group Reply
       3 = Join Group Request
       4 = Join Group Reply
       5 = Leave Group Request
       6 = Leave Group Reply
       7 = Confirm Group Request
       8 = Confirm Group Reply

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 Code
    In a Create Group Request message, the code field indicates if the
    new host group is to be public or private:
       0 = public
       1 = private
    In all other Request messages, the code field contains zero.
    In a Reply message, the Code field specifies the outcome of the
    request:
       0       = request granted
       1       = request denied,  no resources
       2       = request denied,  invalid code
       3       = request denied,  invalid group address
       4       = request denied,  invalid access key
       5 - 255 = request pending, retry in this many seconds
 Checksum
    The checksum is the 16-bit one's complement of the one's
    complement sum of the IGMP message starting with the IGMP Type.
    For computing the checksum, the checksum field should be zero.
 Identifier
    In a Confirm Group Request message, the identifier field contains
    zero.
    In all other Request messages, the identifier field contains a
    value to distinguish the request from other requests by the same
    host.
    In a Reply message, the identifier field contains the same value
    as in the corresponding Request message.

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 Group Address
    In a Create Group Request message, the group address field
    contains zero.
    In all other Request messages, the group address field contains a
    host group address.
    In a Create Group Reply message, the group address field contains
    either a newly allocated host group address (if the request is
    granted) or zero (if denied).
    In all other Reply messages, the group address field contains the
    same host group address as in the corresponding Request message.
 Access Key
    In a Create Group Request message, the access key field contains
    zero.
    In all other Request messages, the access key field contains the
    access key assigned to the host group identified in the Group
    Address field (zero for public groups).
    In a Create Group Reply message, the access key field contains
    either a non-zero 64-bit number (if the request for a private
    group is granted) or zero.
    In all other Reply messages, the access key field contains the
    same access key as in the corresponding Request.

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 Protocol Rules
    Request messages are sent only by hosts.  Reply messages are sent
    only by multicast agents.  If a host receives an IGMP message of a
    type other than the four Reply types specified above, the message
    is discarded.
    A Request message is sent with its IP destination field containing
    the well-known address of the Multicast Agent Group.  The IP
    time-to-live field is initialized by the sender to 1, in order to
    limit the scope of the request to immediate neighbor multicast
    agents only.  The IP source address field contains the individual
    IP address of the sending host.
    A Reply message is sent only in response to a Request message.
    Its IP destination address field contains the individual address
    of the host that sent the corresponding Request.  (A Confirm Group
    Reply may also be sent to the host group address specified in its
    corresponding Confirm Group Request.)  The IP source address field
    contains the individual IP address of the replying multicast
    agent.
    When a host sends a new Create Group, Join Group, or Leave Group
    Request message, it supplies an arbitrary identifier that it has
    not used within the last T0 seconds.  (It is usually sufficient
    just to increment the identifier for each new request.)  The host
    initializes a timer to T1 seconds and a retransmission counter to
    zero.  If a Reply message with a matching identifier is not
    received before the timer expires, it is reset to T1 seconds and
    the retransmission counter is incremented.  If the counter is less
    than N1, the host retransmits the Request message with the same
    identifier.  If the counter equals N1, the host gives up; if the
    request was to create or join a group, it is deemed to have
    failed; if the request was to leave a group, it is deemed to have
    succeeded.
    If a "request pending" code is received in a matching reply to a
    Create Group, Join Group, or Leave Group Request, the timer is
    reset to the number of seconds specified by the code and the
    retransmission counter is reset to zero.  The new timer value
    applies to one timeout interval only -- if the timer expires, it
    is reset to T1 seconds, the counter is incremented, and the
    request is retransmitted.
    The first matching Reply to a Create Group, Join Group, or Leave
    Group Request containing a "request granted" or "request denied"
    code determines the outcome of the request.  Any subsequent or

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    non-matching Replies are discarded by the host.  However, if a
    host receives an affirmative Create Group Reply or Join Group
    Reply that neither matches an outstanding Request nor contains the
    address of a group to which the host belongs, the host should
    immediately send a Leave Group Request for the unexpected group
    address.
    A "request granted" reply to a Create Group Request implies that,
    as well as the group being created, the requesting host is granted
    membership in the group, i.e. there is no need to send a separate
    Join Group Request.
    Confirm Group Request messages must be sent periodically by hosts
    to inform the neighboring multicast agent(s) of the hosts'
    continuing membership in the specified groups.  If an agent does
    not receive a Confirm Group Request message for a particular group
    within an agent-defined interval, it stops delivering datagrams
    destined to that group.
    For each group to which it belongs, a host maintains a
    confirmation timer and a variable t.  The variable t is
    initialized to T2 seconds. Whenever the host's request to create
    or join a group is granted, and whenever the host either sends a
    Confirm Group Request or receives a Confirm Group Reply with a
    "request granted" code for the group, the host sets the group's
    timer to a random number uniformly distributed between t and t +
    T3 seconds.  If the host receives a a Confirm Group Reply with a
    "request pending" code, t is changed to the value of the code and
    the timer is reset to a random number between the new t and t +
    T3.  The variable t retains its value until another "request
    pending" code is received.  Whenever the timer expires, the host
    sends a Confirm Group Request.
    Even if a host fails to receive Confirm Group Replies to its
    Requests, it continues to consider itself a member of the group,
    because it may still be able to receive multicast datagrams from
    other hosts on the same local network.  Only if a host receives a
    "request denied" code in a Confirm Group Reply does it stop
    sending Confirm Group Requests and consider its membership to be
    revoked.
    Multicast agents respond to Confirm Group Request messages by
    sending Confirm Group Reply messages either to the individual
    sender of the Request or to the host group address specified in
    the Request.  By sending back a Confirm Group Reply to all
    neighboring members of a group, a multicast agent is able to reset
    every member's timer with a single packet.  The randomization of

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RFC 988 July 1986 Host Extensions for IP Multicasting

    the timers is intended to cause only the one member whose timer
    expires first to send a Confirm Group Request, stimulating a Reply
    to reset all the timers.  The use of the "request pending" codes
    allows the multicast agent to control the rate at which it
    receives Confirm Group Requests.
 Protocol Timing Constants
    The following timing constants are specified for IGMP.  They are
    subject to change as a result of operational experience.
    T0 = 300 seconds  minimum recycle time for identifiers
    T1 = 2 seconds    retrans. interval for Create/Join/Leave Requests
    N1 = 5 tries      retrans. limit for Create/Join/Leave Requests
    T2 = 15 seconds   initial value for Confirm Request variable t
    T3 = 15 seconds   random range for Confirm Request variable t

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RFC 988 July 1986 Host Extensions for IP Multicasting

APPENDIX II. HOST GROUP ADDRESS ISSUES

 This appendix is not part of the IP multicasting specification, but
 provides background discussion of several issues related to IP host
 group addresses.
 Group Address Binding
    The binding of IP host group addresses to physical hosts may be
    considered a generalization of the binding of IP unicast
    addresses.  An IP unicast address is statically bound to a single
    local network interface on a single IP network.  An IP host group
    address is dynamically bound to a set of local network interfaces
    on a set of IP networks.
    It is important to understand that an IP host group address is NOT
    bound to a set of IP unicast addresses.  The multicast agents do
    not need to maintain a list of individual members of each host
    group.  For example, a multicast agent attached to an Ethernet
    need associate only a single Ethernet multicast address with each
    host group having local members, rather than a list of the
    members' individual IP or Ethernet addresses.
 Group Addresses as Logical Addresses
    Host group addresses have been defined specifically for use in the
    destination address field of multicast IP datagrams.  However, the
    fact that group addresses are location-independent (they are not
    statically bound to a single network interface) suggests possible
    uses as more general "logical addresses", both in the source as
    well as the destination address field of datagrams.  For example,
    a mobile IP host might have a host group address as its only
    identity, used as the source of datagrams it sends.  Whenever the
    mobile host moved from one network to another, it would join its
    own group on the new network and depart from the group on the old
    network.  Other hosts communicating with the mobile one would deal
    only with the group address and would be unaware of, and
    unaffected by, the changing network location of the mobile host.
    Host group addresses cannot, however, be used to solve all
    problems of internetwork logical addressing, such as delivery to
    the "nearest" or the "least loaded" network interface of a
    multi-homed host. Furthermore, there are hazards in using group
    addresses in the source address field of datagrams when the group
    actually contains more than one host.  For instance, the IP
    datagram reassembly algorithm relies on every host using a
    different source address.  Also, errors in a datagram sent with a

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RFC 988 July 1986 Host Extensions for IP Multicasting

    group source address may result in error reports being returned to
    all members of the group, not just the sender.  In view of these
    hazards, this memo specifies the use of host group addresses only
    as destinations of datagrams, either in the destination address
    field or as the last element of a source routing option.  However,
    it is recommended that datagrams with a group source address be
    accepted without complaint, thereby allowing other implementations
    to experiment with logical addressing applications of host group
    addresses.
 Recycling of Transient Host Group Addresses
    Since host group addresses are of fixed, relatively small size,
    transient group addresses must be recycled to satisfy continuing
    requests for creation of new groups.  The multicast agents make an
    effort to ensure that a group has no members anywhere in the
    internet before allocating its address to a new group.  However,
    under certain conditions of internetwork partitioning and
    membership migration, it is impossible to guarantee unique
    allocation of an address without seriously compromising the
    availability and robustness of host groups. Furthermore, hosts
    that are unaware that a particular group has ceased to exist may
    send datagrams to it long after its address has been assigned to a
    new group.  Therefore, hosts should be prepared for the
    possibility of misdelivery of multicast IP datagrams to unintended
    hosts, even in private groups.  Such misdelivery can only be
    detected at a level above IP, using higher-level identifiers or
    authentication tokens.  (The access key of a private group might
    be used in some applications as such an identifier.)  Of course,
    there are other threats to privacy of communication in the
    internet, besides group address collision, such as untrustworthy
    gateways or unsecured networks. End-to-end encryption is an
    effective defense against such threats.

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