Load Partial Config: merge vs append

cancel
Showing results for 
Show  only  | Search instead for 
Did you mean: 

Load Partial Config: merge vs append

L3 Networker

When loading a partial config you have 3 options:  replace, merge, append.  I can't find a description anywhere as to what exactly each of these does!  Especially between merge and append.  I did see this KB article but it really doesn't explain the ramifications for each of these choice and neither does the CLI Guide.

 

KB Article referenced:  https://live.paloaltonetworks.com/t5/Management-Articles/How-to-Load-Partial-Configurations/ta-p/625...

 

I'm doing an AppID optimization project using the Migration Tool 3.3.15 which does not export via API to PANOS 8.  Well, it does, it just can't parse the security policies and commit.  So, I'm going to import the changes manually using load partial config.  All I have to do is remove unused objects, create 1 new service-group and update the security rulebase.

 

Before I do on a client's appliance I was trying to figure out what exactly each of these options do so I can make an intelligent (at least somewhat intelligent ;-)) decision.

 

Replace:  My guess is this replaces the entire xpath section you reference in the call.  For instance,

 load config partial from x.xml from-xpath devices/entry/vsys/entry/rulebase/security mode replace to-xpath /config/devices/entry/vsys/entry/rulebase/security

This would replace everything in the security stanza with whatever exists in x.xml.

 

Append:  This would put everything in the security stanza in the file x.xml at the end of the existing ruleset and not overwrite what's there.  If this is true, what would happen if you had an entry that had the same name?  Would it just update it or overwrite it? Generate an error?

 

Merge:  This is the one that I have no idea how it would operate at all.

 

I'm leaning toward replace since I've got policies that were updated from services to AppID, I've got new policies and some have been rearrange.

 

Thank in advance!

1 accepted solution

Accepted Solutions

Cyber Elite
Cyber Elite

@CafNetMatt,

 

God partial config is such a crap feature. Sorry, but it's use case is extremely limited, and I don't recommend you utilize it unless you really know what you are doing. I've ran into so many situations where an admin has tried to merge security rules and havene't properly dealt with zones, objects, or anything else these rules rely on and then for some reason find it acceptable to force commit when they run into issue. 

If you are looking to do something like this, I really recommend modifying the config directly through the XML. At least this way you have to actually look at what you are doing and can validate the config off the box. 

 

Merge:

This essentially acts as a replace, but it won't delete any entries that aren't present and if entries exist with duplicate entry names the rule will simply be combined. Usually Merge is 100% what you would use during a normal partial config instead of the 'replace' or 'append' function. This issue with this is that Merge can have unintended actions if you have two seperate entries with the same name and don't actually realize that until after the fact. 

 

Replace;

Does exactly what you already guessed. If you target /devices/localhost.localdomain/vsys/vsys1/rulebase/security and replace then it'll remove anything already present and input whatever you have. Useful if you need to do a very quick migration or if two firewalls are switching locations within the network for some reason. 

 

Append: 

This doesn't do anything but take all of the config that you've specified and put it on under whatever is already there. I've honestly never had a use case for an append action. 

 

View solution in original post

6 REPLIES 6

L3 Networker

The Migration Tool should be able to export via the API, if you are recieving API errors (sometimes a space on the end of a rule or something similar) you will likely recieve these same errors using the load config partial.

 

I assume you are going to load all rules back (the original port based and the new app based) In that case I would recommend removing all security policies in the GUI (do NOT commit) then load config partial with append

 

 load config partial from x.xml from-xpath devices/entry/vsys/entry/rulebase/security mode append to-xpath /config/devices/entry/vsys/entry/rulebase/security

 

At this point (assuming there were no errors) you should have all the rules that are in the migration tool in the canidate config of the firewall

 

The MT API pushes it just fine.  No errors. But the PAN won't commit.  It can't parse the security rulebase.  From what I've read, until MT 4 is out the best way is to manually migrate the XML.

 

Thanks for the recommendation, but what do each of these options actually do?  What is there affect?  That's what I'm trying to figure out because the documentation doesn't describe what exactly, merge, append and replace actually do and when to use each.

Cyber Elite
Cyber Elite

@CafNetMatt,

 

God partial config is such a crap feature. Sorry, but it's use case is extremely limited, and I don't recommend you utilize it unless you really know what you are doing. I've ran into so many situations where an admin has tried to merge security rules and havene't properly dealt with zones, objects, or anything else these rules rely on and then for some reason find it acceptable to force commit when they run into issue. 

If you are looking to do something like this, I really recommend modifying the config directly through the XML. At least this way you have to actually look at what you are doing and can validate the config off the box. 

 

Merge:

This essentially acts as a replace, but it won't delete any entries that aren't present and if entries exist with duplicate entry names the rule will simply be combined. Usually Merge is 100% what you would use during a normal partial config instead of the 'replace' or 'append' function. This issue with this is that Merge can have unintended actions if you have two seperate entries with the same name and don't actually realize that until after the fact. 

 

Replace;

Does exactly what you already guessed. If you target /devices/localhost.localdomain/vsys/vsys1/rulebase/security and replace then it'll remove anything already present and input whatever you have. Useful if you need to do a very quick migration or if two firewalls are switching locations within the network for some reason. 

 

Append: 

This doesn't do anything but take all of the config that you've specified and put it on under whatever is already there. I've honestly never had a use case for an append action. 

 

Wow!

 

Thank you for the great explanation.  I wish Palo Alto would put this is their documentation.

 

I get what you say about load partial being dodgy; its just that I've had issues with in the past taking a full config from MT, loading it onto a firewall and ending up with interfaces that are a total mess.  That's after verifying that names match (including case) and everything else related to interfaces, zones, VRs & VSYSs. I've had it where interfaces end up duplicated or that the NAT rule somehow no longer recognizes the interface in the rule.  I've always been careful setting up interfaces on the PAN first, exporting the config and using that as the base but it still seems to go south more often than it works.

 

It's the main reason I was looking at partial load.  I'm not messing with interfaces or virtual routers nor even NAT.  Just updating objects and security policies.  I may try loading the whole config and doing a commit verify. Worse case I revert to running.

 

I'm leaning toward doing a replace.

 

For objects, I'm leaning toward replace since I'm cleaning out unused objects.  Only a single new item, a service group, is being added here.

 

For the rulebase I'm also leaning toward replace.  I really like merge but I have a number of rules that are just being converted to AppID instead of having the old rule in place with the new AppID rule in front of it.  My naming conventions are a little screwy which I should've thought about.  I changed the rule with the original name to the AppID rule and used the new Cloned rule as the legacy rule.  That way when the client cleans them out, he ends up with the original rule names.

So, I ended up not having to do a load partial.

 

The error I was getting during commit, Missing Service, turned out to be just that.  For some reason, 3 security policies were to set to service of 'null'.  Once I corrected this the config was able to be parsed.

 

I still really wanted the explanation so I know what each does.

 

Thanks again!

Thanks for raising this, I have had the same question only to find out by trial and error. With the merge function I have found if an element can only have a single entry or configuration the name of which already exists in the config, it effectively REPLACES that element in the destination x-path. Where an element can have multiple entries (e.g. groups) the merge function will COMBINE the existing config with the new. Understanding this is helpful in case you have existing elements with the same name.

 

I believe the Append function is designed for policies only, where the imported config is tacked on the end of the existing althouhg I would expect this to have the same result as a merge, especially when an existing rule has the same name (you can't have two rules with the same name even in a candidate config - the 'new' rule is probably going to merge with or replace the existing - I would suggest more trial and error or more consise documentation from PAN 🙂

 

I have done all my optimisation off-site so never had API access to the customer equipment, should that be the case I have no idea what would happen when pushing the conifg to Panorama via the API - would this merge, append or replace the destination element / stanza?

  • 1 accepted solution
  • 13070 Views
  • 6 replies
  • 1 Likes
Like what you see?

Show your appreciation!

Click Like if a post is helpful to you or if you just want to show your support.

Click Accept as Solution to acknowledge that the answer to your question has been provided.

The button appears next to the replies on topics you’ve started. The member who gave the solution and all future visitors to this topic will appreciate it!

These simple actions take just seconds of your time, but go a long way in showing appreciation for community members and the LIVEcommunity as a whole!

The LIVEcommunity thanks you for your participation!