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Visionary Solutions Duet E-2 - Choosing An Ethernet Switch; Switch Guidelines

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Visionary, Network Audio Video
3
DUETE-2/DuetD-2 USER MANUAL
NETWORK AV INFRASTRUCTURE PREREQUISITES
CHOOSING AN ETHERNET SWITCH
Switches must support these functions:
Jumbo Frames (enabled)
IGMP Snooping
IGMP Querier
IGMP Snooping Fast Leave
If the switches are used for multi-switch networking, they must also support PIM Routing (Sparse, Dense, or Sparse-Dense).
These features may be helpful as well:
Dynamic multicast router port
Forwarding unknown multicast to multicast router ports only
Any network switch should have a backplane capacity of at least (2 x 1000-Mbps x N) where N is the number of ports on the switch
passing the video traffic. For example, a 24-port switch where all available ports may be used to pass video traffic should have a (2 x
1000 x 24) = 48Gbps backplane. One channel of encoder video can be sent or received from each port in this switch example
although full bandwidth may not be used at any one time.
The maximum distance between devices is 100m (328ft) over CAT 5e (or better) cable. This distance can be extended in increments
of 100m (328ft) by using a gigabit switch as a repeater between devices. Copper to fiber adapters can extend the maximum distance
between devices up to 10km through the use of fiber.
Since different brands and models of switches perform differently when handling multicast IP packets, functional verification and
pressure testing are also recommended in any installation. Switches that perform well in smaller installations may not work well in
larger installations. Recommended configuration settings may vary based on your switch.
Visionary Solutions offers sample switch configuration files, optimized for Network AV, for certain switch brands/models for testing
purposes. Contact support@vsicam.com
to obtain the files.
SWITCH GUIDELINES
1. Enable IGMP querying and snooping (set IGMP Version to IGMP V2 if the switch is capable). To enable the transmission of a
source to multiple destinations, Duet-2 devices make use of multicast. The default behavior of a layer-2 switch is to broadcast
those packets, which means that every packet will be transmitted to all possible destinations. IGMP snooping checks IGMP
packets passing through the network, picks out the group registration, and configures multicasting accordingly. A layer-2 switch
supporting IGMP Snooping can passively snoop on IGMP Query, Report, and Leave (IGMP version 2) pack
ets transferred
between IP multicast routers/switches and IP multicast hosts to determine the IP multicast group membership. This is why any
network switch used with Duet-2 must support IGMP Snooping. Our end points use IGMP protocol to assign the end points into
multicast groups and the router uses IGMP snooping to efficiently route multicast packets only to the receivers that want to
receive them.
IGMP Snooping is used to identify multicast IP packets, assign IP packets into multicast groups so that the router only sends to
devices that want to receive the packets, establish membership in a multicast group, and register a router to receive designated
multicast traffic. Multicast filtering is achieved by dynamic group control management. Many switches have the IGMP Snooping
feature disabled by default and manual configuration is required. Often, checking the Enable IGMP Snooping option is the only
setting needed to enable IGMP Snooping. Implementing IGMP Snooping is vendor specific
and additional configuration is often
needed.
IGMP Snooping Querier is used to send out group
membership
queries on a timed interval, retrieve IGMP
membership
reports
from active
members,
and update the group
membership
tables. The Leave Group packet is sent when a device wants to leave a
group.

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