Define Your ISP Connections and Link Types
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SD-WAN

Define Your ISP Connections and Link Types

Table of Contents

Define Your ISP Connections and Link Types

Configure an SD-WAN interface profile to group physical links by the link tag and control link speeds.
Where Can I Use This?What Do I Need?
  • NGFW (Managed by PAN-OS or Panorama)
  • NGFW (Managed by Strata Cloud Manager)
Create an SD-WAN interface profile to define the characteristics of ISP connections and to specify the speed of links and how frequently the firewall monitors the link, and specify a link tag for the link.
SD-WAN link tags group multiple links together that is called link bundling or scaling. Link tags are used to identify common link types and links in SD-WAN interface profiles. They are free form entries that are referenced in multiple locations. Be consistent and meaningful when creating the link tags.
The tag allows you to control the order in which the interfaces are used. It also gives Panorama the ability to systematically configure multiple interfaces with SD-WAN functionality.
When you specify the same Link Tag on multiple links, you are grouping (bundling) those physical links into a link bundle or fat pipe. You must configure an SD-WAN interface profile and specify it for an Ethernet interface enabled with SD-WAN before you can save the Ethernet interface.
Group links based on a Common Criterion. For example, group links by path preference from most preferred to least preferred, or group links by cost.
SD-WAN interface profiles map tags to interfaces, and helps to set bandwidths and probe rates. They also identify whether a transport is private (such as MPLS), or public (such as Ethernet, ADSL, Cable).