To verify that the service connection has been successfully set up, select
Panorama > Cloud Services > Status > Status and check
that the Status is OK.
If you created a service connection with placeholder values to enable
communication between mobile users and users at remote networks, you do not
need to verify the service connection status.
The Deployment Status area allows you to view the progress
of onboarding and deployment jobs before they complete, as well as see more
information about the status of completed jobs.
If the status is not OK, hover over the Status icon to
view any errors.
To see a graphical representation of the service connection along with status
details, select Service Connection on the
Monitor tab.
Select a region to get more detail about that region.
Click the tabs below the map to see additional information about the service
connections.
Status tab:
Location—The location where your service
connection is deployed.
Remote Peer—The corporate location to which this s
service infrastructure is setting up an IPSec tunnel.
Allocated Bandwidth—The number of service
connections you have allocated multiplied by 300 Mbps.
This number does not reflect the available service connection
bandwidth.
While each service connection provides approximately 1 Gbps of
throughput, the actual throughput is dependent on several factors,
including:
Traffic mix (for example, frame size)
Latency and packet loss between the service connection and
the headquarters location or data center
Service provider performance limits
Customer termination device performance limits
Other customer data center traffic
ECMP—If you have equal cost multipath (ECMP)
configured for this service connection. Since ECMP is not used for
service connections, this status is Disabled.
- Config Status—The status of your last configuration
push to the service. If the local configuration and the configuration in the
cloud match, the Config Status is In sync. If you
have made a change locally, and not yet pushed the configuration to the
cloud, this may display the status Out of sync. Hover
over the status indicator for more detailed information. After committing
and pushing the configuration to Prisma Access, the Config Status changes to
In sync.
BGP Status—Displays information about the BGP
state between the firewall or router at your corporate/headquarters
location and Prisma Access where the service connection is established.
Although you might temporarily see the status pass through the various
BGP states (Idle, Active,
Open send, Open pend,
Open confirm, most commonly, the BGP status
shows:
This field will also show if the BGP connection is in an error state:
Tunnel Status—The operational status of the
connection between Prisma Access and your service connection.
Statistics tab:
Location—The location where your service
connection is deployed.
Remote Peer—The corporate location to which the
service connection is setting up an IPSec tunnel.
Ingress Bandwidth (Mbps)—The bandwidth from the
HQ/data center location to Prisma Access.
- Ingress Peak Bandwidth (Mbps)—The peak load from the
HQ/data center location into the cloud service.
Egress Bandwidth (Mbps)—The bandwidth from Prisma
Access into the HQ/data center location.
- Egress Peak Bandwidth (Mbps)—The peak load from
Prisma Access into the HQ/data center location.
QoS—Select this button to display a graphic chart
that shows a real-time and historical QoS statistics, including the
number of dropped packets per class. This chart displays only for
service connections or remote network connections that have QoS
enabled.
If you configured BGP, you can check its status by selecting .
The BGP Status dialog displays. This table provides you with the following
information:
Peer—Routing information for the BGP peer, including status, total
number of routes, configuration, and runtime statistics and counters.
The total number of routes display in the bgpAfiIpv4-unicast
Counters area, in the Incoming
Total and Outgoing Total
fields.
Local RIB—BGP routes that Prisma Access uses locally. Prisma
Access selects this information from the BGP RIB-In table, which stores
the information sent by neighboring networking devices, applies local
BGP import policies and routing decisions, and stores the Local RIB
information in the Routing Information Base (RIB).
Note that only the first 256 entries are shown. To view additional
entries, enter a subnet or IP address in the Filter field and click
Apply Filter to view a subset of the routing entries up to a maximum of
256.
RIB Out—Routing information that Prisma Access advertises to its
peers through BGP update messages.