02-09-2023 11:44 PM
Hi everyone,
Can someone familiar with the Cisco SNS-3615-K9 Appliance version vs. the VM version?
I have a decision to make to choose between the 2.
Any suggestion with pro and con is very much appreciated.
thanks,
Byme88
Solved! Go to Solution.
02-15-2023 10:13 AM
Stay with appliances if you can for the following reasons:
1- both hardware and software are supported by Cisco. This is huge. When there are issues, you don't want to have too many chefs in the kitchen. They are pointing fingers at each other.
I am going that issue at the moment and ISE in AWS. you're at the mercy of different vendors. Stay with appliances for as long as you can.
02-10-2023 12:25 AM
- Usually appliance will provide higher capacities and support more clients and NADs versus VM solution(s) , checkout : https://www.cisco.com/c/en/us/td/docs/security/ise/performance_and_scalability/b_ise_perf_and_scale.html
M.
02-10-2023 12:30 AM
I prefer to go with appliance, since Cisco tweaked hardware work as expected
02-10-2023 08:36 AM
02-12-2023 12:35 PM
One thing to consider with Cisco SNS- servers, is that they are single purpose only. Once they are end of life (no more Cisco support, and ISE versions refuse to run on them), you cannot deploy any other software (like a hypervisor) on them. At that point you have an expensive brick.
02-15-2023 04:49 AM
In addition to all above inputs I can share experience using VMs on VMWare environment and it works without issues. Also there is flexibility to scale up and down with number of VMs. For upgrades a fresh VM can be build in parallel and replace an existing, which is an optional thing for disposal.
02-15-2023 05:32 AM
Performance-wise an equivalently provisioned VM will be the same as the hardware appliance.
ISE VM specs are pretty steep though so if your hypervisor environment is resource-constrained, it may not be a good choice to run VMs.
If you have the resources, VMs are much easier to spin up and you have more options with upgrade paths.
Some customers choose hardware appliances since the operations teams don't mix well (i.e. VMware admins not wanting or not knowing how to give ISE admins the necessary access to manage the VMs).
The downside of hardware is that it will eventually go end of sales and you also have to pay annual support costs on it. For instance, the 37xx series is expected out later this year at which point the 36xx will be end of sales. If you had VMs, you can just spin up a new one matching the specs and have a 37xx equivalent the same day. Also, the hardware obviously takes up space and power.
02-15-2023 10:13 AM
Stay with appliances if you can for the following reasons:
1- both hardware and software are supported by Cisco. This is huge. When there are issues, you don't want to have too many chefs in the kitchen. They are pointing fingers at each other.
I am going that issue at the moment and ISE in AWS. you're at the mercy of different vendors. Stay with appliances for as long as you can.
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