05-26-2022 02:00 AM
I have DNAC Up and running in the main site "Single node" and we will proceed with the DR setup "1+1+1".
1) I need to confirm that there is an option to convert existing enterprise VIP to DR VIP to avoid reprovisioning of devices for the main site.
2) In that case enterprise VIP and DR VIP must be in the same subnet or it could be in different subnet.
05-26-2022 03:20 AM
Hi
"
To enable HA in your production environment, the following requirements must be met:
Your cluster consists of three Cisco DNA Center appliances with the same number of cores. This means that your cluster can consist of both the first-generation 44 core appliance (Cisco part number DN1-HW-APL) and the second-generation 44 core appliance (Cisco part numbers DN2-HW-APL and DN2-HW-APL-U)."
I redommend you ready this doc.
05-26-2022 04:02 AM
Many thanks Flavio for your reply.
The topic that I'm talking about is the DNAC disaster recovery setup not DNAC high availability.
HA deals with a cluster node failure but disaster recovery deals with datacenter failure
05-26-2022 04:30 AM
Sorry, I messed that. Although some requirements are similar as you can see below.
But, you your specific question,
"
1) I need to confirm that there is an option to convert existing enterprise VIP to DR VIP to avoid reprovisioning of devices for the main site.
2) In that case enterprise VIP and DR VIP must be in the same subnet or it could be in different subnet."
You can see on this guide that, it mention BGP between Peers, which means, they can be in different networks.
If you want to use Border Gateway Protocol (BGP) to advertise your system's virtual IP address routes, you need to configure your system's Enterprise virtual IP address on each of the main and recovery site's neighbor routers. The configuration you need to enter will look similar to one the following examples:
Interior BGP (iBGP) Configuration Example
router bgp 64555
bgp router-id 10.30.197.57
neighbor 172.25.119.175 remote-as 64555
neighbor 172.25.119.175 update-source 10.30.197.57
neighbor 172.25.119.175 next-hop-self
where:
64555
is the neighbor router's local and remote AS number.
10.30.197.57
is the neighbor router's IP address.
172.25.119.175
is your system's Enterprise virtual IP address.
11-18-2022 05:37 AM
Did you get this resolved? I'm running into the same issue.
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