02-26-2024 09:23 PM
What is the purpose of ACI Golf.
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02-27-2024 12:18 AM
GOLF - is just one letter away from ROFL
But seriously, it stands for Giant OverLay Fabric. A VERY EARLY attempt at
Essentially what it (supposedly) allowed you to do was connect those legacy routers to the spines as L3 Out connections, using OSPF between the Spines and the N7K/ASR9K and to provide a l3 EVPN service. Configuration was (supposedly) then able to be pushed from ACI to these devices using OpFlex (Open Flexible protocol). It was Cisco's hope to get other vendors to implement an OpFlex stack in their devices which would allow a SDN Controller (i.e an APIC) to push policy to the devices using an Imperative model rather than a Declarative model.
I only ever knew of one site (in 2016) that ever actually tried to implement it (because they'd recently - 2013 or so - spent $millions on Nexus 7K core routers). They spend weeks trying to get it to work, could get any of the OpFlex thing happening and had to manually configure everything and spent many hours with Cisco TAC before giving up and using new Nexus 9000 Routers.
There may be sites using it successfully, but it is NOT a feature you'd want to look into implementing UNLESS you have Nexus 7K/ASR9K kit hanging around that you want to use. And even then, if may not be worth the effort.
02-27-2024 12:46 AM - edited 02-27-2024 12:46 AM
Hi @Suprit Chinchodikar ,
AHHHH - the old "hidden AS number" trick that the wizard forgot!
Probably worth asking this as a separate question with new topic, because it's a doozy!
To answer this, I'll steal a section of our BGP Lab guide where the L3Out is called ProductionVRF_BGP.L3Out
Local-AS Number: Set the AS number here
02-27-2024 12:18 AM
GOLF - is just one letter away from ROFL
But seriously, it stands for Giant OverLay Fabric. A VERY EARLY attempt at
Essentially what it (supposedly) allowed you to do was connect those legacy routers to the spines as L3 Out connections, using OSPF between the Spines and the N7K/ASR9K and to provide a l3 EVPN service. Configuration was (supposedly) then able to be pushed from ACI to these devices using OpFlex (Open Flexible protocol). It was Cisco's hope to get other vendors to implement an OpFlex stack in their devices which would allow a SDN Controller (i.e an APIC) to push policy to the devices using an Imperative model rather than a Declarative model.
I only ever knew of one site (in 2016) that ever actually tried to implement it (because they'd recently - 2013 or so - spent $millions on Nexus 7K core routers). They spend weeks trying to get it to work, could get any of the OpFlex thing happening and had to manually configure everything and spent many hours with Cisco TAC before giving up and using new Nexus 9000 Routers.
There may be sites using it successfully, but it is NOT a feature you'd want to look into implementing UNLESS you have Nexus 7K/ASR9K kit hanging around that you want to use. And even then, if may not be worth the effort.
02-27-2024 12:28 AM
@RedNectar,
Thanks for the brief explanation. I was doing a lab for L3out and found the option of GOLF over there.
Also, when we select BGP as a routing protocol for L3out where do we define our AS? I don't see any option for that unless I'm doing configuration for RR.
02-27-2024 12:46 AM - edited 02-27-2024 12:46 AM
Hi @Suprit Chinchodikar ,
AHHHH - the old "hidden AS number" trick that the wizard forgot!
Probably worth asking this as a separate question with new topic, because it's a doozy!
To answer this, I'll steal a section of our BGP Lab guide where the L3Out is called ProductionVRF_BGP.L3Out
Local-AS Number: Set the AS number here
03-04-2024 09:41 PM
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