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I've given up trying to make IGMPv3 work on my network. The protocols drop back to the lowest supported version, which is usually an Apple iOS device gratuitously leaving and rejoining the mDNS group (224.0.0.251) every few seconds. Even if you configure IGMPv3, the queriers will end up staying in v2 mode.
I put in some comments to the IETF multicast area suggesting
changes to the protocols (which are now > 20 years old!). The
principle ought to be that hosts answer v2 queries with v2
responses and v3 queries with v3 responses, and the switches
accept both. But that's not how it works now.
There's not really much of an advantage to running v3 anyway. The
most important feature is source-specific multicast, accepting
multicasts only from specific sources. This is important in IP TV
(e.g., AT&T Uverse) but doesn't matter much for us.
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I don't see why. Dumb switches are totally transparent to their
neighbors. The only real way to detect one is to notice that you
have more than one direct neighbor for the spanning tree protocol,
but that's pretty obscure. Another is that the duplicate IGMP
responses from multiple hosts that snooping switches often
suppress are not suppressed, but that's even more obscure.
IGMP is not a routing protocol, it's a group management protocol. Hosts automatically advertise the IP multicast addresses they are interested in, and switches snoop on this so they can suppress unwanted traffic. When the switch is dumb, the IGMP messages are still sent if somebody queries for them, but the switches ignore them and forward everything. This is actually not a serious problem as long as everybody runs at a gigabit or more, and you leave room for regular traffic. But it's death to 10 Mb/s hosts plugged into dumb switch ports, or for many WiFi base stations. OpenWRT implements multicast-to-unicast conversion to get around this problem, and it works well here.
Another way to control multicast without IGMP is to give it its
own VLAN. I experimented with that a while ago, but I got snooping
working well enough that it's easier to keep everything together.
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