Kaspersky SD-WAN
- Kaspersky SD-WAN Help
- About Kaspersky SD-WAN
- Architecture of the solution
- Deploying Kaspersky SD-WAN
- Redundancy of solution components
- About the installation archive
- About the attended, unattended, and partially attended action modes
- Preparing the administrator device
- Managing passwords
- Preparing the configuration file
- Replacing the graphics of the orchestrator web interface
- Replacement of a failed controller node
- Upgrading Kaspersky SD-WAN
- Removing Kaspersky SD-WAN
- Logging in and out of the orchestrator web interface
- Licensing of Kaspersky SD-WAN
- User interface of the solution
- Navigating to the orchestrator API
- Managing the Kaspersky SD-WAN infrastructure
- Managing domains
- Managing data centers
- Managing management subnets
- Managing controllers
- Managing a VIM
- Managing users and their access permissions
- Multitenancy
- Managing CPE devices
- About the interaction of the CPE device and the orchestrator
- About the interaction of the CPE device and the controller
- Default credentials of KESR CPE devices
- Scenario: Automatic registration (ZTP) of a CPE device
- Scenario: Deployment on the VMware virtualization platform and automatic registration (ZTP) of a vCPE device
- Scenario: Re-registering a CPE device
- Managing CPE templates
- Managing CPE devices
- Adding a CPE device
- Generating an URL with basic CPE device settings
- Manually registering a CPE device
- Unregistering a CPE device
- Specifying the address of a CPE device
- Enabling and disabling a CPE device
- Restarting a CPE device
- Shutting down a CPE device
- Connecting to the CPE device console
- Viewing the password of a CPE device
- Exporting orchestrator and controller connection settings and SD-WAN interfaces from a CPE device
- Exporting network interfaces from a CPE device
- Changing the DPID of a CPE device
- Deleting CPE devices
- Two-factor authentication of a CPE device
- Managing certificates
- Automatically deleting and disabling CPE devices
- Grouping CPE devices using tags
- Configuring logs on CPE devices
- Specifying NTP servers on CPE devices
- Managing modems
- Updating firmware
- Manually updating firmware on a CPE device
- Uploading firmware to the orchestrator web interface
- Scheduling firmware updates on selected CPE devices
- Scheduling firmware updates on CPE devices with specific tags
- Restoring firmware of a KESR-M1 CPE device
- Restoring firmware of a KESR-M2-5 CPE device
- Correspondence of CPE device models with firmware versions
- Deleting firmware
- Additional configuration of CPE devices using scripts
- Managing network interfaces
- Creating network interfaces
- Creating a network interface with automatic assignment of an IP address via DHCP
- Creating a network interface with a static IPv4 address
- Creating a network interface with a static IPv6 address
- Creating a network interface for connecting to an LTE network
- Creating a network interface for connecting to a PPPoE server
- Creating a network interface without an IP address
- Editing a network interface
- Disabling or enabling a network interface
- Canceling the application of network interface settings to a CPE device
- Deleting a network interface
- Creating network interfaces
- Configuring the connection of a CPE device to the orchestrator and controller
- Managing SD-WAN interfaces
- About sending information about SD-WAN interfaces of the WAN type to the controller
- Package fragmentation
- Traffic queues on SD-WAN interfaces
- Creating an SD-WAN interface of the WAN type
- Editing an SD-WAN interface
- Disabling or enabling an SD-WAN interface
- Deleting an SD-WAN interface of the WAN type
- Managing service interfaces
- Managing OpenFlow port groups
- Configuring a UNI for connecting CPE devices to network services
- Adding a static route
- Filtering routes and traffic packets
- Route exchange over BGP
- Route exchange over OSPF
- Using BFD to detect routing failures
- Ensuring high availability with VRRP
- Transmission of multicast traffic using PIM and IGMP protocols
- Managing virtual routing and forwarding (VRF) tables
- Monitoring traffic packet information using the NetFlow protocol
- Diagnosing a CPE device
- Running scheduled tasks on CPE devices
- IP address and subnet ranges for CPE devices
- Managing the firewall
- Managing network services and virtualization of network functions
- Managing network service templates
- Managing network services
- Scenario: Deploying a virtual network function
- Scenario: Deploying a physical network function
- Managing VNF and PNF packages
- Specifying a brief description of a shared network service
- Managing virtual network functions
- Selecting the flavour of a virtual network function
- Configuring external connection points of a virtual network function
- Basic settings of a virtual network function
- Hosting the virtual network function in a data center and on a uCPE device
- Stopping or starting a virtual network function or a VDU that is part of it
- Pausing or unpausing a virtual network function or a VDU that is part of it
- Suspending or unsuspending a virtual network function or a VDU that is part of it
- Soft rebooting a virtual network function or a VDU that is part of it
- Hard rebooting of a virtual network function or a VDU that is part of it
- Redeploying a virtual network function or a VDU that is part of it
- Auto-healing a virtual network function or a VDU that is part of it
- Managing VDU snapshots
- Managing physical network functions
- Configuring a P2P service
- Configuring a P2M service
- Configuring an M2M service
- Configuring a shared network (OS 2 SHARED)
- Configuring a virtual router (OS vRouter)
- Configuring a VLAN
- Configuring a VXLAN
- Configuring a flat network
- Configuring a UNI
- Monitoring solution components
- Specifying the Zabbix server
- Specifying the Zabbix proxy server
- Configuring CPE device monitoring
- Viewing monitoring results
- Viewing problems
- Viewing the status of the solution and its components
- Viewing logs
- Viewing and deleting service requests
- Sending CPE device notifications to users
- Selecting the Docker container log verbosity
- Monitoring CPE, VNF, and PNF devices using SNMP
- Link monitoring
- Building an SD-WAN network between CPE devices
- Quality of Service (QoS)
- Transmission of traffic between CPE devices and client devices using transport services
- Traffic packet duplication
- Scenario: Directing application traffic to a transport service
- Managing Point-to-Point (P2P) transport services
- Managing Point-to-Multipoint (P2M) transport services
- Managing Multipoint-to-Multipoint (M2M) transport services
- Managing L3 VPN transport services
- Managing IP multicast transport services
- Managing transport services in an SD-WAN instance template
- Managing transport services in a CPE template
- Traffic mirroring and forwarding between CPE devices
- Appendices
- Glossary
- Control plane
- Controller
- Customer Premise Equipment (CPE)
- Data plane
- Orchestrator
- Physical Network Function (PNF)
- PNF package
- Port security
- SD-WAN Gateway
- SD-WAN instance
- Software-Defined Networking (SDN)
- Software-Defined Wide Area Network (SD-WAN)
- Tenant
- Transport strategy
- Universal CPE (uCPE)
- Virtual Deployment Unit (VDU)
- Virtual Infrastructure Manager (VIM)
- Virtual Network Function Manager (VNFM)
- VNF Package
- Contacting Technical Support
- Information about third-party code
- Trademark notices
Managing SD-WAN interfaces
SD-WAN interfaces are logical interfaces on top of the network interfaces of the CPE device and OpenFlow ports of the virtual switch, which form an additional level of abstraction. Each SD-WAN interface is mapped to a network interface by the network interface name and an OpenFlow port by the OpenFlow port number. The following types of SD-WAN interfaces are possible:
- SD-WAN interfaces of the LAN type are SD-WAN interfaces created by default and mapped to network interfaces that are connected to the LAN. You cannot delete and create an SD-WAN interface of the LAN type, but you can edit it to specify the maximum speed and configure traffic queues.
- SD-WAN interfaces of the WAN type are SD-WAN interfaces mapped to network interfaces that are connected to the WAN.
- An SD-WAN interface of the management type is an SD-WAN interface created by default and mapped to a network interface that is used by the Zabbix monitoring system for passive monitoring of the CPE device, as well as by the orchestrator for connecting to the CPE device over SSH. You cannot delete and create an SD-WAN interface of the management type.
The table of SD-WAN interfaces is displayed in the CPE template and on the CPE device:
- To display the table of SD-WAN interfaces in a CPE template, go to the SD-WAN → CPE templates menu section, click the CPE template, and select the SD-WAN settings → Interfaces tab.
- To display the table of SD-WAN interfaces on a CPE device, go to the SD-WAN → CPE menu section, click the CPE device, and select the SD-WAN settings → Interfaces tab.
Information about SD-WAN interfaces is displayed in the following columns of the table:
- Type is the type of the SD-WAN interface:
- WAN
- LAN
- Management
- Inherited indicates whether the SD-WAN interface is inherited from a CPE template:
- Yes
- No
This column is displayed only on the CPE device.
- Port is the OpenFlow port number.
- Alias is the name of the network interface.
- Maximum rate is the maximum speed of the SD-WAN interface in Mbps.
Additional information about WAN checks to which SD-WAN interfaces of the WAN type are connected is displayed in the following columns of the table:
- IP for tracking are the IP addresses of hosts for checking WAN availability.
- Reliability is the minimum number of successful checks that makes the WAN available.
- Count is the number of requests to hosts within one WAN check.
- Timeout is time to wait for a response from hosts, in milliseconds.
- Interval interval in seconds for checking the WAN.
- Down is the number of unsuccessful checks that makes the WAN unavailable.
- Up is the number of successful checks that makes the WAN available.
- Speed monitoring indicates whether the speed of the SD-WAN interface of the WAN type is being measured:
- Yes
- No
In this section About sending information about SD-WAN interfaces of the WAN type to the controller Traffic queues on SD-WAN interfaces Creating an SD-WAN interface of the WAN type |