10-28-2019 06:39 AM
10-28-2019 07:34 AM
Keep in mind that cisco is in the business of shifting boxes (and software licenses too). If they produced a single box that ruled them all this would impact the selling of lots of other boxes!!
With that in mind, the different software architectures (IOS, XE, XR, NX-OS, etc) will have varying capabilities which are then in turn mated with very specific hardware. Chances are a 3850 could run DMVPN but it would probably be run all in CPU and have terrible performance.
cheers,
Seb.
10-28-2019 06:50 AM
Hi there,
The 3850 is a switch.
DMVPN is a router function.
Cisco doesn't like function cross-over between product families!
cheers,
Seb.
10-28-2019 07:06 AM
Hi Seb,
Thanks for your feedback.
I’m asking that because DMVPN is based on combination of protocols (MGRE, Routing protocols, NHRP, Ipsec..) and since the IP services support the Routing protocols (like a router) I want to know what block the support of the DMVPN in this case? is it the Ipsec encryption or what exactly?
BR.
Siham
10-28-2019 07:34 AM
Keep in mind that cisco is in the business of shifting boxes (and software licenses too). If they produced a single box that ruled them all this would impact the selling of lots of other boxes!!
With that in mind, the different software architectures (IOS, XE, XR, NX-OS, etc) will have varying capabilities which are then in turn mated with very specific hardware. Chances are a 3850 could run DMVPN but it would probably be run all in CPU and have terrible performance.
cheers,
Seb.
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