12-04-2017 08:34 AM
Good Morning Experts!
We are currently looking at deploying ISE to our international locations. All AAA requests will come to the London datacenter where a single PSN resides. In the event of a London datacenter outage, we are concerned that the latency will be too high coming back to the U.S.A. Is there a recommendation on latency for AAA functions between clients and the policy nodes?
Along with that, we may be able to mitigate the risk by deploying a second overseas ISE configuration in our Amsterdam location. However, the latency may still be an issue if there is an issue at both locations. No links are using all the bandwidth at this time, but QoS is certainly on the radar.
Overall, we just need to know what the recommended latency is for clients to policy servers. Please see attached for a drawing which may help explain what we're trying to do.
Thank you.
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12-04-2017 08:43 AM
This is part of the HLD process.
For more information see https://communities.cisco.com/docs/DOC-68347
12-04-2017 08:43 AM
This is part of the HLD process.
For more information see https://communities.cisco.com/docs/DOC-68347
12-04-2017 08:45 AM
Found that one already, however it doesn't answer the client to server latency requirements/.
12-04-2017 09:50 AM
Client to server is more forgiving with Dot1x radius and client which is less susceptible to the delays
12-05-2017 09:49 PM
To add to Jason's comments, see ISE Latency and Bandwidth Calculators
The primary latency factor is that of the secondary ISE servers (including PSNs) from Primary PAN. This is measured in ms. Next must consider latency from NADs to PSN, but this is more lenient and timeouts set in seconds. Client to PSN traffic is limited to web portal /redirect services and now latency is similar to that of other web-based services. Other service where PSN speaks directly to endpoint is posture (also web-based communication) and Profiling (NMAP/SNMP Query). These also can tolerate latency measured > sec, but can tune SNMP timeout for probe as needed.
Craig
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