I don't mean to sound or anything Mark, but what is in the table is exactly
what it means.  Check out the documentation for more specific information.
Perhaps "show ip mroute" in the command reference

 

It is a sparse-mode multicast group

It has joined the shortest-path tree which means instead of going through
the RP, communication is directly back to the source via the shortest path
tree (this is the default)

The group has been pruned (no receivers downstream)

It is a connected and local

It has the register flag.

 

Regards,

Joe Astorino
CCIE #24347 (R&S)
Sr. Support Engineer - IPexpert, Inc.
URL:  <http://www.IPexpert.com> http://www.IPexpert.com
  

From: [email protected]
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Mark Matters
Sent: Wednesday, July 08, 2009 11:52 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: [OSL | CCIE_RS] what's this SJPCLF?

 


Join, prune and register flags ? Why is this happening?

Flags: D - Dense, S - Sparse, B - Bidir Group, s - SSM Group, C - Connected,
       L - Local, P - Pruned, R - RP-bit set, F - Register flag,
       T - SPT-bit set, J - Join SPT, M - MSDP created entry,
       X - Proxy Join Timer Running, A - Candidate for MSDP Advertisement,
       U - URD, I - Received Source Specific Host Report,
       Z - Multicast Tunnel, z - MDT-data group sender,
       Y - Joined MDT-data group, y - Sending to MDT-data group
Outgoing interface flags: H - Hardware switched, A - Assert winner
 Timers: Uptime/Expires
 Interface state: Interface, Next-Hop or VCD, State/Mode


(*, 224.1.1.1), 00:41:03/00:02:49, RP 200.0.0.1, flags: SJPCLF
  Incoming interface: FastEthernet0/0, RPF nbr 150.100.50.5
  Outgoing interface list: Null

Checked by AVG - www.avg.com
Version: 8.5.386 / Virus Database: 270.13.8/2224 - Release Date: 07/08/09
05:53:00

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