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ISE in Standalone deployment with automatic failover

kkvitovs
Cisco Employee
Cisco Employee

Hello team,

Could you advise if we support the following design Node 1: PAN+MNT+PSN, Node 2:PAN+MNT+PSN and Node 3: Health Check node for automatic failover?

"Cisco ISE supports manual and automatic failover. With automatic failover, when the Primary PAN goes down, an automatic promotion of the Secondary PAN is initiated. Automatic failover requires a non-administration secondary node, which is called a health check node. The health check node checks the health of Primary PAN. If the health detects that the Primary PAN is down or unreachable, the health check node initiates the promotion of the Secondary PAN to take over the primary role."
https://www.cisco.com/c/en/us/td/docs/security/ise/2-6/admin_guide/b_ise_admin_guide_26/b_ise_admin_guide_26_chapter_011.html#ID59

But is it supported for a Standalone ( All personas running on the same appliance or VM ) deployment, where we need the automatic failover? 

1 Accepted Solution

Accepted Solutions

Damien Miller
VIP Alumni
VIP Alumni
It's not a tested deployment model as you already pointed out. I have used it in the lab without issue, but labs are not production.

If node 3 is not handling any authentication, and you were to open a TAC case, it would be easy enough to deregister it. I've found TAC typically wants you to conform to the stated supported parameters when troubleshooting advanced issues.

I don't usually leverage automated failover in two node deployments, I prefer to control this manually so the process doesn't prompt the only remaining good PSN to reload when you need it up for authentication.

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2 Replies 2

Colby LeMaire
VIP Alumni
VIP Alumni

I don't see why that design would not be supported.  Technically, it isn't a standalone deployment once you add the third node, which would have to be a PSN.

Damien Miller
VIP Alumni
VIP Alumni
It's not a tested deployment model as you already pointed out. I have used it in the lab without issue, but labs are not production.

If node 3 is not handling any authentication, and you were to open a TAC case, it would be easy enough to deregister it. I've found TAC typically wants you to conform to the stated supported parameters when troubleshooting advanced issues.

I don't usually leverage automated failover in two node deployments, I prefer to control this manually so the process doesn't prompt the only remaining good PSN to reload when you need it up for authentication.