Routing Preferences for Service Connection Traffic
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Routing Preferences for Service Connection Traffic
How Prisma Access routes its service connection traffic
from mobile users and remote network connections, and the different
modes you can use.
Prisma Access uses BGP for dynamic routing,
and uses BGP path selection to install routes in the route table.
When Prisma Access routes traffic to your headquarters or data center
using service connections, it uses routing methods that direct that
traffic effectively. Prisma Access uses a default routing model
that was designed to fit the majority of network deployments; however,
not all organization’s networks are the same. To fit a wider range
of deployments, Prisma Access allows you choose another mode for
service connection routing. The following sections describe the
BGP routing methods that Prisma Access uses, along with the factors
you need to consider in your organization’s network before changing
Prisma Access’ default method of service connection routing.
Changing the Prisma Access service connection
routing method requires a thorough understanding of your organization’s
topology and routing devices, along with an understanding of how
Prisma Access routing works as described in this section. We recommend
that you read this section carefully before changing the routing
method from the default setting.
Prisma Access supports static routing and dynamic routing using
BGP for service connections and remote network connections; this
section assumes that you use BGP routing for your Prisma Access
deployments. When you select BGP routing, your organization’s network
learns BGP information from Prisma Access.
- Routing Modes for Service Connections
- Mobile User and Remote Network Routing to Service Connections Overview
- Prisma Access Default Routing
- Hot Potato Routing
- Configure Routing Preferences
Routing Modes for Service Connections
You can choose from the following routing modes with
Prisma Access:
- Default routing—This is the current routing model that Prisma Access uses.Use this routing mode if you want Prisma Access to use BGP best path-selection mechanisms without adjusting any of the BGP attributes. In this mode, Prisma Access will honor any attribute advertised by the customer premises equipment (CPE).
- Hot Potato Routing—Prisma Access hands off the traffic as quickly as it can to your organization’s network.Use this routing method if you want your organization’s network to perform the majority of routing decisions.
Mobile User and Remote Network Routing to Service Connections Overview
It is useful to understand how Prisma Access routes
traffic between mobile users, remote networks, and service connections,
because the routing used by mobile user traffic and remote network
traffic between service connections is different.
Mobile User-service connection routing—The mobile user
connection forms an IPSec tunnel with the nearest service connection. Prisma
Access uses iBGP for internal routing and eBGP to peer with the
customer premises equipment at the data center. The following diagram
shows mobile users in Regions 1 and 2 being routed to the respective
service connections in that region. Mobile users in Region 1 are
accessing applications A and B located at Data Center
1. If your organization’s network uses BGP routing for their service
connections and a service connection experiences an ISP failure
at Data Center 1, Prisma Access detects the failure and routes the
traffic for applications A and B to Data Center 2
after BGP convergence, providing redundancy to your network’s data
centers.
Prisma Access uses the following timing with BGP when it
detects a failure: If you configure BGP routing and have enabled
tunnel monitoring, the shortest default hold time to determine that
a security parameter index (SPI) is failing is the tunnel monitor,
which removes all routes to a peer when it detects a tunnel failure
for 15 consecutive seconds. In this way, the tunnel monitor determines
the behavior of the BGP routes. If you do not configure tunnel monitoring,
the hold timer determines the amount of time that the tunnel is
down before removing the route. Prisma Access uses the default BGP
HoldTime value of 90 seconds as defined by RFC 4271, which is the
maximum wait time before Prisma Access removes a route for an inactive
SPI. If the peer BGP device has a shorter configured hold time,
the BGP hold timer uses the lower value. When the secondary tunnel
is successfully installed, the secondary route takes precedence
until the primary tunnel comes back up. If the primary and secondary
are both up, the primary route takes priority.
Remote Network-service connection routing—Prisma Access
creates a full mesh network with other remote networks and service connections.
As with mobile users, Prisma Access uses iBGP for its internal routing
and eBGP to peer with customer premises equipment to exchange routes.
If a user in Branch 1 is accessing application A from Data
Center 1 in your organization’s data center and the link between
Branch 1 and Data Center 1 goes down, Prisma Access routes the traffic
for application A to Data Center 2 after BGP convergence.
Prisma Access Default Routing
The following figure shows an example of Prisma Access
routing service connection traffic in default routing mode. The
organization’s network has three separate networks in three data
centers and does not have a backbone connecting the networks. In
default routing mode, mobile user pools are advertised equally on
the three networks, as shown at the bottom of the figure.
Note that, when Prisma Access advertises mobile user routes,
it divides the subnets
into Class C /24 address blocks before advertising them;
thus, it advertises the /20 mobile user subnets in chunks of /24
as prefixes are consumed by the gateways.
Make a note of how Prisma Access uses BGP route advertisements:
- Prisma Access does not adjust the default BGP attributes for mobile user advertised routes (Prisma Access adds its AS number to the route advertisements).
- Prisma Access advertises mobile user routes in blocks of /24 subnets and adds BGP community values in the routes it advertises through the service connection. The following figure shows a mobile user deployment with three service connections and three different IP address blocks specified for the mobile user IP address pool: 192.168.64.0/20 for the Asia, Australia & Japan region, 192.168.72.0/20 for the Africa, Europe & Middle East region, and 192.168.48.0/20 for the North America & South America region. Prisma Access divides these routes into block of /24 and advertises them with an Prisma Access’ AS number of 65534, but also appends the BGP community values to the advertisements (Z for Asia, Y for EU, and X for US). Those routes are shown in the middle of the figure. In this way, you can differentiate service connections in your network, even though Prisma Access assigns the same AS number to them.
You can view the community string by selecting PanoramaCloud ServicesStatusNetwork DetailsService ConnectionShow BGP Status and
find the Community field in the Peer tab.
The following figure shows a more common network with a full-mesh
eBGP backbone. The figure shows the routes that Prisma Access has
learned from your organization’s network on the top right. Note
the extra routes that Prisma Access has learned through the Prisma
Access backbone (iBGP) and your organization’s backbone (eBGP).
For traffic between mobile users in the North America
& South America region (US in the diagram) and the
data center in your organization’s Africa, Europe &
Middle East region (EU in the diagram), Prisma Access
chooses the path through the EU service connection because it prefers
routes with a shorter AS-PATH.
In deployments with a full-mesh eBGP backbone, asymmetry can
arise when Prisma Access cannot reach a particular data center due
to an ISP/CPE failure at the customer’s data center. The following
figure shows what could happen when the link to the EU service connection
goes down. Your network detects the link failure and builds a new
route table for AS 200. Traffic from the US service connection to
AS 200 uses the path through AS 100 because the eBGP route for your
backbone between AS 200 and AS 100 is preferred to the iBGP route
between service connections EU and US. However, return traffic is
not guaranteed through the same path because the on-premises CPE
can choose either path (shown in red) to return the traffic.
The previous examples show a network whose routes have not been
aggregated (that is, you have not performed route summarization
before you send the BGP route advertisements to Prisma Access).
The following example shows a network that summarizes its routes
to 10.0.0.0/8 before sending to Prisma Access. If you select default
routing, this configuration can lead to asymmetric routing issues,
because Prisma Access cannot determine the correct return path from
the summarized routes.
If your Prisma Access deployment has Remote
Networks, Palo Alto Networks does not recommend the use of route
summarization on Service Connections. Route summarization on service
connections is for Mobile Users deployments only.
If you use route aggregation for mobile users, we strongly recommend
that you enable hot potato routing instead
of default routing, where Prisma Access hands off the traffic as
quickly as possible to your organization’s network; in addition,
we recommend that you select a Backup SC as
described in the following section for each service connection to
have a deterministic routing behavior.
Hot Potato Routing
When you select Hot Potato Routing,
Prisma Access egresses the traffic bound to service connections/data
centers from its internal network as quickly as possible.
With hot potato routing, Prisma Access prepends the AS path (AS-PATH)
to the BGP prefix advertisements sent from gateways. This prepending
is performed when the prefixes are advertised out of the service
connection to your organization’s on-premises CPE. Prisma Access
prepends the AS-PATHs so that your CPE gives the correct preference
to the primary and secondary tunnels, so that if the primary tunnel
goes down, your CPE chooses the secondary tunnel as the backup.
If you specified a different IP address for the secondary (backup)
BGP peer, Prisma Access adds more prepends based on the tunnel type,
as shown in the following table.
Prefix Type | Service Connection Tunnel Type | Number of As-Path Prepends | Total AS-PATHs Seen on the CPE |
---|---|---|---|
Gateway prefixes from primary service connection | Primary or Secondary tunnel with the same BGP peer IP address | 0 | 1 |
Gateway prefixes from backup service connection | Primary or Secondary tunnel with the same BGP peer IP address | 3 | 4 |
Gateway prefixes from all other service connections | Primary or Secondary tunnel with the same BGP peer IP address | 6 | 7 |
Gateway prefixes from primary service connection | Secondary tunnel with a different BGP peer IP address | 1 | 2 |
Gateway prefixes from backup service connection | Secondary tunnel with a different BGP peer IP address | 4 | 5 |
Gateway prefixes from all other service connections | Secondary tunnel with a different BGP peer IP address | 7 | 8 |
In hot potato routing mode, Prisma Access allows you to specify
a backup service connection (Backup SC)
during onboarding. Specifying a Backup SC informs
Prisma Access to use that service connection as the backup when
a service connection link fails.
The following figure shows a hot potato routing configuration
for traffic between the US service connection and AS 200, with the
EU service connection configured as the Backup SC of
the US connection. Using hot potato routing, Prisma Access sends
the traffic from its closest exit path through the US service connection.
The return traffic takes the same path through AS100 because this
path has a shorter AS-PATH to the mobile user pool in the US location.
Prisma Access prepends the AS-PATH to its prefix advertisements
depending on whether the tunnel is a primary tunnel, a backup tunnel,
or not used for either primary or backup.
Because you have set up a backup service connection, if the link
to the US service connection goes down, hot potato routing sends
the traffic out using its shortest route through the EU service
connection. This routing scenario also applies to networks that
use route aggregation.
You can also use backup service connections for multiple service
connections in a single region. The following figure shows a Prisma
Access deployment with two service connections in the North America
region. In this case, you specify a Backup SC of
US-E for the US-W service connection, and vice versa, to ensure
symmetric routing.
Configure Routing Preferences
To enable routing preferences, complete the following
steps.
- To change the routing defaults, choose between Default and Hot Potato Routing when you configure the Service Setup for service connections.
- To specify a preferred service connection to use if a link fails, configure a Backup SC when you create a service connection.