: Priority and Failover on Panorama in HA
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Priority and Failover on Panorama in HA

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Priority and Failover on Panorama in HA

Each Panorama peer in the HA pair is assigned a priority value. The priority value of the primary or secondary peer determines which will be eligible for being the main point of administration and log management. The peer set as primary assumes the active state, and the secondary becomes passive.
Typically, the active peer is responsible for handling all configuration changes and pushing them to the managed firewalls. While it is possible for the passive peer to push configuration changes, this is not recommended as it may lead to issues within the HA setup.
The passive peer is synchronized and ready to transition to the active state if a path, link, system, or network failure occur on the active Panorama.
When a failover occurs, only the state (active or passive) of the Panorama peer changes; the priority (primary and secondary) does not. For example, when the primary peer fails, its status changes from active-primary to passive-primary.
A peer in the active-secondary state can perform all functions with two exceptions:
  • It cannot manage firewall or Log Collector deployment functions such as license updates or software upgrades.
  • It cannot log to an NFS until you manually change its priority to primary. Only the Panorama virtual appliance in Legacy mode supports NFS.
The following table lists the capabilities of Panorama based on its state and priority settings:
Panorama HA Capabilities
For more information, see Panorama HA Prerequisites or Set Up HA on Panorama.