IP Address Changes For Remote Network Connections That Allocate Bandwidth by Location
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IP Address Changes For Remote Network Connections That Allocate Bandwidth by Location

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IP Address Changes For Remote Network Connections That Allocate Bandwidth by Location

Learn about how IP addresses change for legacy remote networks that allocate bandwidth by location.
This section applies if you have a legacy Prisma Access deployment that allocates bandwidth by location. Any new deployments allocate bandwidth by compute location; to learn about how Prisma Access allocates those IP addresses, see Remote Network IPSec Termination Nodes and Service IP Addresses on Prisma Access.
IP addresses for remote network connections are unique, not shared, and dedicated to your Prisma Access deployment. These IP addresses do not change after Prisma Access creates them as part of remote network onboarding, and the IP addresses persist after an upgrade. However, take care when increasing the bandwidth of an existing connection, because the IP address of a remote network can change if that increase causes the bandwidth in a location to exceed 500 Mbps.
In addition, egress IP addresses can change if Prisma Access creates a new Prisma Access Locations by Compute Location and you decide to use this new compute location with locations you have already onboarded. See Add a New Compute Location for a Deployed Prisma Access Location for details.
These bandwidth guidelines apply only when you upgrade an existing connection. A single remote network connection, even a 1000 Mbps (Preview) connection, always receives a single
Service IP Address
, regardless of its size.
The 1000 Mbps bandwidth option is in preview mode. The throughput during preview is delivered on a best-effort basis and the actual performance will vary depending upon the traffic mix.
The following example shows three remote network connections in the same location, each with a bandwidth of 150 Mbps. Since the total bandwidth is 500 Mbps, Prisma Access assigns a single IP address for all connections in the location.
The following example shows the bandwidth of remote network connection A being increased from 150 Mbps to 300 Mbps. Since the total bandwidth of all connections is now more than 500 Mbps, Prisma Access assigns a new service IP address for the connection with the additional bandwidth. The other service IP addresses remain unchanged.
Conversely, given four remote networks with a bandwidth of 100 Mbps, if you increase the bandwidth of one of the remote networks to 100 Mbps, the Service IP address of that remote network does not change because the total bandwidth is now 500 Mbps.
If you reduce the bandwidth of a remote network connection, the Service IP address does not change.
To find the service IP addresses in Panorama, select
Panorama
Cloud Services
Status
Network Details
tab and click the
Remote Networks
radio button to display the
Service IP Address
for the remote networks, or use the API script.

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