Advanced Path and QoS Stacks
Table of Contents
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- Add a Branch
- Add a Data Center
- Add a Branch Gateway
- Configure Circuits
- Configure Internet Circuit Underlay Link Aggregation
- Configure Private WAN Underlay Link Quality Aggregation
- Configure Circuit Categories
- Configure Device Initiated Connections for Circuits
- Add Public IP LAN Address to Enterprise Prefixes
- Manage Data Center Clusters
- Configure a Site Prefix
- Configure a DHCP Server
- Configure NTP for Prisma SD-WAN
- Configure the ION Device at a Branch Site
- Configure the ION Device at a Data Center
- Switch a Site to Control Mode
- Allow IP Addresses in Firewall Configuration
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- Configure a Controller Port
- Configure Internet Ports
- Configure WAN/LAN Ports
- Configure a Loopback Interface
- Configure a PoE Port
- Configure and Monitor LLDP Activity and Status
- Configure a PPPoE Interface
- Configure a Layer 3 LAN Interface
- Configure Application Reachability Probes
- Configure a Secondary IP Address
- Configure a Static ARP
- Configure a DHCP Relay
- Configure IP Directed Broadcast
- VPN Keep-Alives
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- Configure Prisma SD-WAN IPFIX
- Configure IPFIX Profiles and Templates
- Configure and Attach a Collector Context to a Device Interface in IPFIX
- Configure and Attach a Filter Context to a Device Interface in IPFIX
- Configure Global and Local IPFIX Prefixes
- Flow Information Elements
- Options Information Elements
- Configure the DNS Service on the Prisma SD-WAN Interface
- Configure SNMP
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- Prisma SD-WAN Branch Routing
- Prisma SD-WAN Data Center Routing
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- Configure Multicast
- Create a WAN Multicast Configuration Profile
- Assign WAN Multicast Configuration Profiles to Branch Sites
- Configure a Multicast Source at a Branch Site
- Configure Global Multicast Parameters
- Configure a Multicast Static Rendezvous Point (RP)
- Learn Rendezvous Points (RPs) Dynamically
- View LAN Statistics for Multicast
- View WAN Statistics for Multicast
- View IGMP Membership
- View the Multicast Route Table
- View Multicast Flow Statistics
- View Routing Statistics
- Prisma SD-WAN Incident Policies
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- Prisma SD-WAN Branch HA Key Concepts
- Configure Branch HA
- Configure HA Groups
- Add ION Devices to HA Groups
- View Device Configuration of HA Groups
- Edit HA Groups and Group Membership
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- Configure Branch HA with Gen-1 Platforms (2000, 3000, 7000, and 9000)
- Configure Branch HA with Gen-2 Platforms (3200, 5200, and 9200)
- Configure Branch HA with Gen-2 Embedded Switch Platforms (1200-S or 3200-L2)
- Configure Branch HA for Devices with Software Cellular Bypass (1200-S-C-5G)
- Configure Branch HA for Platforms without Bypass Pairs
- Configure Branch HA in a Hybrid Topology with Gen-1 (3000) and Gen-2 (3200) Platforms
- Prisma SD-WAN Incidents and Alerts
Advanced Path and QoS Stacks
Advanced Path and QoS Set Stacks comprise Path Policy Sets and Quality of Service (QoS)
Policy Sets. Path policy sets specify traffic engineering while QoS policy sets specify
business priority.
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Advanced Path and QoS Set Stacks comprise
Path Policy Sets and Quality of Service (QoS) Policy Sets. Path
policy sets specify traffic engineering while QoS policy sets specify
business priority. These policy sets contain policy rules.
An Advanced path or a QoS Stack consists of a
minimum of two default policy rules—Default Rule and Enterprise
Default Rule. Additional
policy rules can be added as required. A site can have a single
Path or QoS Stack attached to it at a time. An Advanced Path or
QoS Stack is a collection of Path or QoS policy sets that are stacked
in the order in which they are evaluated by a site.
- A Path or QoS Stack can accommodate a maximum of four policy sets and one default rule policy set. The policy sets in a stack are ordered from left to right, with the left-most policy set designated as the highest priority.
- At any given time, only one Path or QoS Stack can be attached to a site. You can add, change, or delete a policy set or a Path or QoS stack at any time.
The relationship among Advanced Path Stacks, Policy Sets, and
Policy Rules is shown below.
Path and QoS policies simplify policy management. For example,
all applications may have the same priority across an entire enterprise,
but based on geographical regions, path policies may differ between
sites.