The correct answer is bidirectional PIM. Cisco describes bidirectional PIM as a multicast mode designed for many-to-many applications where traffic is forwarded only along a shared tree rooted at the rendezvous point. Unlike traditional PIM Sparse Mode, BIDIR-PIM does not build source-specific shortest-path trees for each active source. That design reduces multicast state in the network because routers maintain group state rather than separate source and group state for every sender. PIM Sparse Mode initially uses a shared tree through the RP, but it can switch to source trees after receivers and routers learn the active source. Dense mode floods and prunes and is not a shared-tree-only model. Source-specific multicast explicitly uses source-specific joins and does not use an RP-based shared tree. The wording “shared tree only” is the key distinction: BIDIR-PIM is built for scalable many-to-many multicast, accepts some non-shortest-path forwarding tradeoff, and avoids per-source state growth. Therefore, the stored answer must be corrected to bidirectional. Reference topics: BIDIR-PIM, shared trees, rendezvous points, many-to-many multicast scaling, PIM-SM source-tree behavior.
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