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12633
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yshchory
Cisco Employee
Cisco Employee

Dear Cisco Customers and Partners,

 

We know that the Cisco Identity Services Engine (ISE) is a critical element of your network security and so stability is of paramount importance. As a result, many of you asked us for a suggested release given several criteria including: the release has been in the field for a reasonable time, the release has at least one patch available, and the release will be supported for a long period of time. We listened and made it an official program with ISE 2.4 as the first suggested release.

 

It is time to take the next step in the suggested release program and announce ISE 2.6 as the suggested release. ISE 2.6 has met all the milestones you set out with initial release February 18, 2019 and patch 2 released July 26, 2019. Starting with patch 2, ISE 2.6 replaces ISE 2.4 as the suggested release. If you are upgrading to a new ISE version, we now instead suggest ISE 2.6. If you are building out a new ISE instance, we would suggest you use ISE 2.6. ISE 2.6 is a long-term release and will provide you the longest life of any of the currently supported releases. ISE 2.6 will minimize the number of ISE upgrades.

 

You might ask what gives you the confidence to make ISE 2.6 a suggested release beyond just time and patches. We have quietly been making changes to ensure: that the ISE 2.6 internal architecture is simply better than prior releases in terms of robustness and quality, our testing environments are better and continually improving, and our processes are better to maintain that high quality you expect. But much more important than these are the results in the field – less bugs, less cases, higher customer satisfaction. With ISE’s NPS constantly improving (+28 points this year only!) – this is what is making the difference – customers and partners that see the result of these efforts.

 

This announcement doesn’t in any way diminish ISE 2.4. It doesn’t mean any change in the way we support ISE 2.4. ISE 2.4 continues forward with routine patches. If you are running anything older than 2.4, now is the time to consider migrating to ISE 2.6!

 

You can download ISE 2.6 here (CCO ID and current service agreement required).

 

Sincerely,

 

The Cisco ISE Product Management Team

5 Comments

Hi

Please can you comment on the potential benefits of going with this release 2.6? We have just started an ISE rollout and deciding whether we stop, upgrade to 2.6 as had been progressing using the previous 2.4 release. I have reviewed 2.6 features and nothing specifically is needed by my client but keen to understand if there are any hidden benefits (extended lifecycle of s/w? better stability?)

Thanks Jon

bern81
Level 1
Level 1

Hi all,

 

If anyone upgraded to 2.6 could you please share the feedback?

 

Any unreported bug or issues ....

 

We are planning to perform the upgrade from 2.4 to 2.6 so we want to be sure everything is running smoothly.

Julien Potier
Level 1
Level 1

I've just upgraded a cluster from 2.3 to 2.6. Was pretty smooth.  I'd suggest patching your 2.4 to the latest patch for that release train and then upgrade. Make sure you run the URT from your secondary before attempting to upgrade. It should highlight any issues that need addressing prior upgrading. Alternatively you can spin up a new 2.4 mocked up server import your config and upgrade it .  The upgrade guide is self explanatory 

gschmitt.ngit
Level 1
Level 1
Does anyone know if NMAP is working in 2.6? It's broken in 2.2 patch 15+, 2.3, and 2.4.
eagle05
Level 1
Level 1

It's better less Cisco-Router profiles.  Had to adjustments for Samsung oui to use instead of the NMAP.

 

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