I'm trying to deep dive on IP Video 2110 and this is the first video series (from the networkside) that I have found truly helpful, thank you very much for your time and effort !
These are excellent videos, I have never seen someone go so deep into explaining the 'why' of networking, its definitely a breath of fresh air, can't wait to watch your videos on other networking concepts. Hope you have plans for new topics. Thanks for hitting rock bottom and leaving no stone unturned to explain the details.
I am glad you are enjoying the videos. As for the side story, I guess it was not a big deal in the long run because if you look at IPv6 multicast, mapping the whole address into the MAC was not even a possibility. So essentially, they were able to take their experience from IPv4 mapping directly to IPv6 mapping (although mapping 32 bits instead of 23 which is at least more sensible).
Thank you Stefan. We are making every effort to complete this series quickly (without compromising quality) so look out for new videos as they are added. Thanks again for your support.
Your videos are brilliant! Thank you for taking the time to create them!!! Both the content is very much on the spot and your voice is incredibly clear and easy to understand. Will recommend to all my friends ^^
Wow this was really informative and easy to understand. I'm a visual learner so I kind of drew what you were saying in my head as I watched along. I could only imagine if your lectures were animated....omygoodness
Thank you for your kind words. With a limited production budged, unfortunately limited PP based animation is all that is on offer. You will probably see it being used more and more as the lectures get more complex.
Thanks for the good explanation. May I ask you a question? I have a streamer running on my router OS embedded. The stream is coming over the udp to the multicast address. When I route the stream to my internal router interface (where PC is connected) VLC is successfully connecting and playing video. But I need to stream outside and when I rout the stream to the external interface I see the multicast traffic running (with tcpdump), but my VLC on my local PC doesn't connect anymore. My provider told me they have IGMP and PIM set and running. Unfortunately I cant check the stream as I have no other available PC. And the VLC on the smartphone doesn't support udp routing. What I misunderstood? What am I doing wrong?
at time 22:16 , you have minus 4 bits from 32 , Can you pls help in understanding "From where 4 bits comes from.". I am unable to understand. This Video is truly informative. 1110 is common in which IP range ?
Please explain what takes place during a broadcast? If broadcasters switch to 5G rather that cable and satellite, which in the US could amount to 400 only. How does this affect the bandwidth utilization bearing in mind that there are many other prospective uses for 5G?
hi,great video,thx, but if any possible to record Inter-AS lab for multi vpn. One thing is that Cisco has a doc to explain multi vpn by using 27profiles,but without Inter-AS staff. So question is which profile support Inter-AS environments.
It is not unlike Unicast in structure so any address (from class D if you only want Multicast addresses, 224-239) where the first three octets stay constant and the last octet spans 0-255. E.g 235.1.2.0 - 235.1.2.255. The main point of that particular excerpt is that we are representing a range of addresses rather than a subnet.
Hello I have been trying to get PotPlayer to open and play an rtsp-multicast stream via a cmd prompt, but have had no luck. I know how to do this with VLC where I can get it to open and display/playback the routed stream [using the command "vlc --rtsp-mcast rtsp://192.168.xx.xxxxx/ch0"] on my PC. When I check my Wireshark trace from the target PC I can see it is indeed a multicast stream received. When I open a command prompt in the PotPlayer directory and issue the command "PotPlayerMini64.exe --rtsp-mcast rtsp://192.168.xx.xxxxx/ch0", all it does is open the player, the stream never plays for me. When I issue the command "PotPlayerMini64.exe --rtsp rtsp://192.168.xx.xxxxx/ch0", it will open the player and start playing the source stream, however when I run Wireshark I can see in the trace the protocol is only TCP and not UDP. Can you provide the correct cmd line "instructions" for this to work? Thanks
Though the 5 unmapped bits , maps 32 IP's to the same multicast mac, I guess that shouldnt be problem w.r.t traffic..Because though packets do not get dropped at L2, if somebody spoofed and send multiast streams, they will get dropped at Layer 3 right... Correcct me if my unerstanding is wrong.
You are correct. An explicit state must exist at L3 for the packet to reach the final hop. The only problem usually is if two or more of the overlapping multicast groups are active in a non IGMP snooping VLAN, and a device is only interested in one of those groups, it can inadvertently process both streams only to drop packets from the stream it is uninterested in.
Yes, I would like his recommendation on a resource for setting up a Multicast operation. Also note that the delivery could be one way communication and wonder how the connection by multiple recipients to the router looks like.
IMHO, this is the best RUclips Networking series I have ever seen. Thank you!
Thank you for your very kind words. They make us strive to do even better.
Perhaps the best multicast series on the planet. Really more than helpful. Thanks a lot !!!
Soumya Siddharth Das Thanks! That made my day.
Finally a well made, accuate video on IP Multicasting. Thanks!
I watched your multicast lecture series from 6 to 10......I would say this is best video series i have ever watched.
I'm trying to deep dive on IP Video 2110 and this is the first video series (from the networkside) that I have found truly helpful, thank you very much for your time and effort !
These are excellent videos, I have never seen someone go so deep into explaining the 'why' of networking, its definitely a breath of fresh air, can't wait to watch your videos on other networking concepts. Hope you have plans for new topics. Thanks for hitting rock bottom and leaving no stone unturned to explain the details.
Loved the level of detail and the background story of saving 15500 USD! Nice touch, great content!
I am glad you are enjoying the videos. As for the side story, I guess it was not a big deal in the long run because if you look at IPv6 multicast, mapping the whole address into the MAC was not even a possibility. So essentially, they were able to take their experience from IPv4 mapping directly to IPv6 mapping (although mapping 32 bits instead of 23 which is at least more sensible).
Luis Gil ejajdkejeje
Luis Gil ⌛️⌛️⌛️⌛️🔚😄🎟🤣🙃🔚😀😋😃😃😄🤣😂😅
Best lectures about multicast I could find. This course addresses some key aspects that others don't. Keep up the good work.
Thank you Stefan. We are making every effort to complete this series quickly (without compromising quality) so look out for new videos as they are added. Thanks again for your support.
Your videos are brilliant! Thank you for taking the time to create them!!!
Both the content is very much on the spot and your voice is incredibly clear and easy to understand. Will recommend to all my friends ^^
Thank you for your kind words. I am glad you are finding the content useful.
Man you really know how to explain. Thank you
I usually don't subscribe easily but after watching video you got my subscription.👍
Well, I hope to not make you repent that decision.
Great job guys.... Thank you so much for these videos.. Really appreciate your hard work and passion towards IP networking.
Thank you very much for your kind words.
Thanks for the efforts. Great series
Great video! Like the reasoning presented at every step, makes it easier to understand the concept.
Thank you for your kind words. Glad you are finding the content useful.
Thanks. Simple but detailed explanation.
Wow this was really informative and easy to understand.
I'm a visual learner so I kind of drew what you were saying in my head as I watched along.
I could only imagine if your lectures were animated....omygoodness
Thank you for your kind words. With a limited production budged, unfortunately limited PP based animation is all that is on offer. You will probably see it being used more and more as the lectures get more complex.
Excellent presentation and explained really well!!
Thank you for your kind words. I am glad you are finding the content useful.
Thanks for the video. What is "AS" short for in the last line of the slide in 10:14?
Great explanation. what is the purpose of the MSB bit set to 0 in remaining 24 bits of multicast mac address ?
Great videos about multicast.
Thank you for your kind words.
Great videos ,, nicely done , Thank you
Thank you for your kind words.
Thank you so much for this video.
Excellent ! Thanks @Decoding Packets
You are welcome. We are glad you are finding the material useful.
good explanation.
thank you!
Superb. Thank you.
great work, please go on
Thank you!
Hey dude why didn't you continue with this ? your videos are very nice !
amazing tutorial. really helped :)
Thanks for the good explanation.
May I ask you a question?
I have a streamer running on my router OS embedded. The stream is coming over the udp to the multicast address.
When I route the stream to my internal router interface (where PC is connected) VLC is successfully connecting and playing video.
But I need to stream outside and when I rout the stream to the external interface I see the multicast traffic running (with tcpdump), but my VLC on my local PC doesn't connect anymore.
My provider told me they have IGMP and PIM set and running.
Unfortunately I cant check the stream as I have no other available PC. And the VLC on the smartphone doesn't support udp routing.
What I misunderstood? What am I doing wrong?
at time 22:16 , you have minus 4 bits from 32 , Can you pls help in understanding "From where 4 bits comes from.". I am unable to understand. This Video is truly informative. 1110 is common in which IP range ?
DO you have any idea that how I can develop a multicast or unicast app?
I am Big Fan of your Multicast series !! Thanks a Lot. Why don’t you make basic videos of SD WAN ?
Please explain what takes place during a broadcast? If broadcasters switch to 5G rather that cable and satellite, which in the US could amount to 400 only. How does this affect the bandwidth utilization bearing in mind that there are many other prospective uses for 5G?
Dear Sir, how to secure multicast ip's in network other then vlan & vpn
I had watched all the series and in fact it's brilliant. Can you please share the PowerPoint document ? Any way, thanks for your great efforts
Great videos about multicast.
But 224.0.0.9 is for RIPv2 not EIGRP :)
Good catch Adam. Frankly I do not even remember if I had meant to say "224.0.0.10 is EIGRP" or "224.0.0.9 is RIP". Glad you are enjoying the video.
Hi, content is very good. But can you share the link for the slides, these help for quick refresher.
hi,great video,thx, but if any possible to record Inter-AS lab for multi vpn.
One thing is that Cisco has a doc to explain multi vpn by using 27profiles,but without Inter-AS staff.
So question is which profile support Inter-AS environments.
how do i configure multicast on ubuntu server 20.04?
Unicast can cause packet loss?
I am not sure what you mean by that. Unreliable unicast (e.g. UDP) can cause packet loss but are you referring to something specific from the video?
I still didnt understand why 25th bit is fixed to 0..can anyone explain?
Between 9:13 and 9:18 when saying 224.0.0.255 (referring to /24) can you give other examples.
It is not unlike Unicast in structure so any address (from class D if you only want Multicast addresses, 224-239) where the first three octets stay constant and the last octet spans 0-255. E.g 235.1.2.0 - 235.1.2.255. The main point of that particular excerpt is that we are representing a range of addresses rather than a subnet.
@@DecodingPackets Thanks. It's clear now. 👍
Awesome
Gud
Hello
I have been trying to get PotPlayer to open and play an rtsp-multicast stream via a cmd prompt, but have had no luck. I know how to do this with VLC where I can get it to open and display/playback the routed stream [using the command "vlc --rtsp-mcast rtsp://192.168.xx.xxxxx/ch0"] on my PC. When I check my Wireshark trace from the target PC I can see it is indeed a multicast stream received.
When I open a command prompt in the PotPlayer directory and issue the command "PotPlayerMini64.exe --rtsp-mcast rtsp://192.168.xx.xxxxx/ch0", all it does is open the player, the stream never plays for me.
When I issue the command "PotPlayerMini64.exe --rtsp rtsp://192.168.xx.xxxxx/ch0", it will open the player and start playing the source stream, however when I run Wireshark I can see in the trace the protocol is only TCP and not UDP.
Can you provide the correct cmd line "instructions" for this to work?
Thanks
make it correct sir 224.0.0.9 is for RIP and 224.0.0.10 for eigrp thanks and ur video is really helpful ..keep making
Duly noted. I am glad you are enjoying the content.
hi could u provide these slides?
Though the 5 unmapped bits , maps 32 IP's to the same multicast mac, I guess that shouldnt be problem w.r.t traffic..Because though packets do not get dropped at L2, if somebody spoofed and send multiast streams, they will get dropped at Layer 3 right... Correcct me if my unerstanding is wrong.
You are correct. An explicit state must exist at L3 for the packet to reach the final hop. The only problem usually is if two or more of the overlapping multicast groups are active in a non IGMP snooping VLAN, and a device is only interested in one of those groups, it can inadvertently process both streams only to drop packets from the stream it is uninterested in.
Can you please do a video on BiDir Pim and SSM as well?
We are planning to restart the IP Multicast series in the very near future. Those two topics are definitely on the list.
Nicely explained, thanks. BTW where can I get the slides?
We are working towards posting the slides, unfortunately since 2017. Lots of backlog but will try to get this done sooner rather than later.
7:00 = 2^28 = 268 million, not 228 million
How do I contact the author?
These comments are read by the author. Do you want to reach out privately?
Yes, I would like his recommendation on a resource for setting up a Multicast operation. Also note that the delivery could be one way communication and wonder how the connection by multiple recipients to the router looks like.
nb@decodingpackets.info
9:30 onwards lost it.
Visit us at decodingpackets.info
Decoding Packets I
bhai teacher ne link diya tha islye khola nahi to maa kasam yaha kabhi nahi aaata
🤎❤️💛💛