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10-12-2021 11:52 PM - edited 10-20-2021 09:49 PM
Hey everyone,
Just started with Palo and was researching the optimal way of configuring ISP failover to include automatic failover of site to site tunnels.
Is there a reason to use PBF over static route removal?
Based on the reading date I was doing today, SRR appears less convoluted than PBF and seems the most similar to Cisco's SLA configuration which worked well for me before.
Thanks
10-13-2021 10:23 AM
Hello,
I have done this many times. First I setup VPN connections via both ISP's. Then I create OSPF adjacencies between the two VPN endpoints. I then use metrics so that I force the traffic down the VPN tunnel I choose as primary and secondary. So for the secondary i would choose a metric such as 5000, this makes sure the primary tunnel is the preferred one.
I have also used Policy based forwarding to accomplish the same thing. IT all depends on which one you are most comfortable with.
Regards,
10-13-2021 04:32 PM
Hi @Evahi21 ,
If you have at least 1 public IP address advertised to both ISPs, I would use a loopback for a single VPN tunnel. That design is by far the simplest, but requires a separate public subnet than the ones on the interfaces.
Thanks,
Tom
07-16-2024 01:29 PM
Hi,
I am having similar issue, but I need more guidelines. I have two ISPs and I want each of them to be used for primary and secondary between Palo Alto and Cisco ASA. From the ASA side, I kept have issue each time I try to bring up the two tunnel at the same time. So far I can only have one tunnel up and when the primary is down, I have to delete the tunnel for it on the ASA side and have only the secondary tunnel used at a time.
Is there are a way to configure this correctly?
Please advise from your experience.
07-17-2024 11:58 AM
Hello,
So you want one tunnel one each ISP? This should be possible as long as the public IP's you are using on the PA are different. I recall Cisco having troubles when you try to connect two Tunnels to the same device on the other side but could be remembering this incorrectly.
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