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Building an RPT Between RP and Receivers
The RPT is the path between the RP and receivers
(hosts) in a multicast group (see Figure 16). The RPT is built by means of a PIM join message from a receiver's
DR:
- A receiver sends a request to join group (G) in an Internet
Group Management Protocol (IGMP) host membership report. A PIM sparse-mode
router, the receiver's DR, receives the report on a directly attached
subnet and creates an RPT branch for the multicast group of interest.
- The receiver's DR sends a PIM join message to its RPF
neighbor, the next-hop address in the RPF table, or the unicast routing
table.
- The PIM join message travels up the tree, and is multicast
to the ALL-PIM-ROUTERS group (224.0.0.13). Each router in
the tree finds its RPF neighbor by using either the RPF table or the
unicast routing table. This is done until the message reaches the
RP and forms the RPT. Routers along the path set up the multicast
forwarding state to forward requested multicast traffic back down
the RPT to the receiver.
Figure 16: Building an RPT Between RP
and Receiver

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