Cisco Cloud APIC for Azure User Guide, Release 5.2(x)
Bias-Free Language
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The ACI policy model enables the specification of application requirements policies. The Cisco Cloud APIC automatically renders
policies in the cloud infrastructure. When you or a process initiates an administrative change to an object in the cloud infrastructure,
the Cisco Cloud APIC first applies that change to the policy model. This policy model change then triggers a change to the
actual managed item. This approach is called a model-driven framework.
Policy Model Key
Characteristics
Key characteristics
of the policy model include the following:
As a model-driven architecture, the software maintains a complete representation of the administrative and operational state
of the system (the model). The model applies uniformly to cloud infrastructure, services, system behaviors, and virtual devices
attached to the network.
The logical and concrete domains are separated; the logical configurations are rendered into concrete configurations by applying
the policies in relation to the available resources. No configuration is carried out against concrete entities. Concrete entities
are configured implicitly as a side effect of the changes to the Cisco Cloud policy model.
The system prohibits communications with newly connected endpoints until the policy model is updated to include the new endpoint.
Network administrators do not configure logical system resources directly. Instead, they define logical (hardware-independent)
configurations and the Cisco Cloud APIC policies that control different aspects of the system behavior.
Managed object manipulation in the model relieves engineers from the task of administering isolated, individual component
configurations. These characteristics enable automation and flexible workload provisioning that can locate any workload anywhere
in the infrastructure. Network-attached services can be easily deployed, and the Cisco Cloud APIC provides an automation framework to manage the lifecycle of those network-attached services.
Logical
Constructs
The policy model manages the entire cloud infrastructure, including the infrastructure, authentication, security, services,
applications, cloud infrastructure, and diagnostics. Logical constructs in the policy model define how the cloud infrastructure
meets the needs of any of the functions of the cloud infrastructure. The following figure provides an overview of the ACI
policy model logical constructs.
cloud infrastructure-wide or tenant administrators create predefined policies that contain application or shared resource
requirements. These policies automate the provisioning of applications, network-attached services, security policies, and
tenant subnets, which puts administrators in the position of approaching the resource pool in terms of applications rather
than infrastructure building blocks. The application needs to drive the networking behavior, not the other way around.
The Cisco ACI Policy
Management Information Model
The cloud infrastructure comprises the logical components as recorded in the Management Information Model (MIM), which can
be represented in a hierarchical management information tree (MIT). The Cisco Cloud APIC runs processes that store and manage
the information model. Similar to the OSI Common Management Information Protocol (CMIP) and other X.500 variants, the Cisco
Cloud APIC enables the control of managed resources by presenting their manageable characteristics as object properties that
can be inherited according to the location of the object within the hierarchical structure of the MIT.
Each node in the tree represents a managed object (MO) or group of objects. MOs are abstractions of cloud infrastructure
resources. An MO can represent a concrete object, such as a cloud router, adapter, or a logical object, such as an application
profile, cloud endpoint group, or fault. The following figure provides an overview of the MIT.
The hierarchical structure starts with the policy universe at the top (Root) and contains parent and child nodes. Each node
in the tree is an MO and each object in the cloud infrastructure has a unique distinguished name (DN) that describes the object
and locates its place in the tree.
The following managed objects contain the policies that govern the operation of the system:
A tenant is a container for policies that enable an administrator to exercise role-based access control. The system provides
the following four kinds of tenants:
The administrator defines user tenants according to the needs of users. They contain policies that govern the operation of
resources such as applications, databases, web servers, network-attached storage, virtual machines, and so on.
Although the system provides the common tenant, it can be configured by the cloud infrastructure administrator. It contains
policies that govern the operation of resources accessible to all tenants, such as firewalls, load balancers, Layer 4 to Layer
7 services, intrusion detection appliances, and so on.
Note
As of the Cisco Application Policy Infrastructure Controller (APIC) Release 4.1(1), the Cisco Cloud APIC only supports load
balancers as a Layer 4 to Layer 7 service.
The infrastructure tenant is provided by the system but can be configured by the cloud infrastructure administrator. It contains
policies that govern the operation of infrastructure resources. It also enables a cloud infrastructure provider to selectively
deploy resources to one or more user tenants. Infrastructure tenant policies are configurable by the cloud infrastructure
administrator.
The cloud infra policies enable you to manage on-premises and inter-region connectivity when setting up the Cisco Cloud APIC.
For more information, see the Cisco Cloud APIC Installation Guide.
Cloud inventory is a service that enables you to view different aspects of the system using the GUI. For example, you can
view the regions that are deployed from the aspect of an application or the applications that are deployed from the aspect
of a region. You can use this information for cloud resource planning and troubleshooting.
Layer 4 to Layer 7 service integration lifecycle automation framework enables the system to dynamically respond when a service
comes online or goes offline. For more information, see Deploying Layer 4 to Layer 7 Services
Access, authentication, and accounting (AAA) policies govern user privileges, roles, and security domains of the Cisco Cloud
ACI cloud infrastructure. For more information, see Cisco Cloud APIC Security
The hierarchical
policy model fits well with the REST API interface. When invoked, the API reads
from or writes to objects in the MIT. URLs map directly into distinguished
names that identify objects in the MIT. Any data in the MIT can be described as
a self-contained structured tree text document encoded in XML or JSON.
Tenants
A tenant (fvTenant) is a logical container for application policies that enable an administrator to exercise domain-based access control. A
tenant represents a unit of isolation from a policy perspective, but it does not represent a private network. Tenants can
represent a customer in a service provider setting, an organization or domain in an enterprise setting, or just a convenient
grouping of policies. The following figure provides an overview of the tenant portion of the management information tree (MIT).
Tenants can be isolated from one another or can share resources. The primary elements that the tenant contains are filters,
contracts, Virtual Routing and Forwarding (VRF) instances, cloud context profiles, Azure provider configurations, and cloud
application profiles that contain cloud endpoint groups (cloud EPGs). Entities in the tenant inherit its policies. VRFs are
also known as contexts; each VRF can be associated with multiple cloud context profiles. A cloud context profile, in conjunction
with a VRF, tenant and region, represents a resource group in Azure. A VNET is created inside the resource group based on
the VRF name.
Tenants are logical containers for application policies. The cloud infrastructure can contain multiple tenants. You must configure
a tenant before you can deploy any Layer 4 to Layer 7 services. The ACI cloud infrastructure supports IPv4 and dual-stack
configurations for tenant networking.
Understanding Tenants, Identities, and Subscriptions
Azure has an active directory structure. The top level structure is the organization, and underneath the organization are
the directories (also known as Azure tenants). Inside the directories, you can have one or more Azure subscriptions.
The relationship between certain Azure components is as follows:
Tenants > Subscriptions > Resource Groups > Resources
Where:
One tenant can have multiple subscriptions, but each subscription can belong to only one tenant
One subscription can have multiple resource groups, but each resource group can belong to only one subscription
One resource group can have multiple resources, but each resource can belong to only one subscription
The following sections provide more detail about each of these components:
In Cloud APIC, each Azure resource group is mapped to one Cloud APIC tenant, and one Cloud APIC tenant can have multiple Azure resource groups.
The relationship between certain Cloud APIC components is as follows:
Tenants > VRFs > Regions
When you create a VRF in Cloud APIC, a new resource group is also created on Azure.
About Azure Subscriptions
An Azure subscription is used to pay for Azure cloud services. An Azure subscription has a trust relationship with Azure Active
Directories (Azure ADs), where the subscription uses the Azure AD to authenticate users, services, and devices. While multiple
subscriptions can trust the same Azure AD, each subscription can trust only one Azure AD.
In Azure, the same Azure subscription ID can be used for multiple ACI fabric tenants. This means that you could configure
the infra tenant using one Azure subscription, and then configure more user tenants in the same subscription. ACI tenants
are tied to Azure subscriptions.
About Tenants and Identities
Following are the different types of tenants and identities available through Azure and Cloud APIC.
Note
For releases prior to release 5.2(1), only managed identity was supported as the access type for infra tenants, while both
managed identity and service principal was supported as the access type for user tenants.
Beginning with release 5.2(1), both managed identity and service principal is now supported as an access type for the infra
tenants and the user tenants.
Managed Identity
Managed identities provide an identity for applications to use when connecting to resources that support Azure AD authentication. Applications
can use the managed identity to obtain Azure AD tokens. For example, an application could use a managed identity to access
resources like Azure Key Vault, where developers can store credentials in a secure manner or to access storage accounts.
Following are several benefits to using managed identities:
You don't need to manage credentials, since credentials are not even accessible to you.
You can use managed identities to authenticate to any resource that supports Azure AD authentication, including your own applications.
Managed identities can be used without any additional cost.
For additional information on managed identities in Azure, see:
If you are configuring tenants in the Cloud APIC using managed identity, then you will make the following configurations in the Azure portal and in the Cloud APIC:
In the Azure portal, you will add a role assignment for a virtual machine. You use this option when the Azure subscriptions are in the same Azure directory (of the same organization).
Note
If your Azure subscriptions are in different directories and you want to configure tenants using managed identity, you can go to the Azure console and click on each of the subscriptions and move the subscriptions under the same Azure directory.
You can only do this if the directories (containing the different subscriptions) are a child of the same parent organization.
In the Cloud APIC, you will choose the Managed Identity option when configuring a tenant in Cloud APIC.
An Azure service principal is an identity created for use with applications, hosted services, and automated tools to access Azure resources. You would
use the service principal identity when you want to configure tenants in different subscriptions. The subscriptions are either
in different Azure directories (Azure tenants) in the same organization, or the subscriptions can be in different organizations.
If you are configuring tenants in the Cloud APIC using service principal, then you will make the following configurations in the Azure portal and in the Cloud APIC:
In the Azure portal, you will be adding a role assignment for an app, where the cloud resources will be managed through a specific application.
In the Cloud APIC, you will choose the Service Principal option when configuring a tenant in Cloud APIC. The subscriptions that you enter in this page can be in different Azure directories (Azure tenants) in the same organization,
or the subscriptions can be in different organizations.
You will choose this option when you have already associated Azure subscriptions with either of the two methods above and
want to create more tenants in that subscription.
If you are configuring a tenant in the Cloud APIC as shared tenant, then you will make the following configurations in the Azure portal and in the Cloud APIC:
You do not have to make any configurations in Azure specifically for a shared tenant, because you will have already associated
Azure subscriptions with either of the two methods above. With the shared tenant, you will just create more tenants in that
existing subscription.
In the Cloud APIC, you will choose the Shared option when configuring a tenant in Cloud APIC.
The cloud context profile contains information on the following Cisco Cloud APIC components:
CIDRs
VRFs
EPGs
Regions
Virtual Networks
Routers
Endpoints
Cloud Service Routers
The Cisco Cloud Services Router 1000V (CSR 1000V) is a virtual router that delivers comprehensive WAN gateway and network
services into virtual and cloud environments. The CSR 1000V enables enterprises to extend their WANs into provider-hosted
clouds. Two CSR 1000Vs are required for Cisco Cloud ACI solution.
Beginning with Release 5.1(2), the maximum number of CSRs supported per region increased from 4 to 8. These procedures provide
instructions for increasing the number of CSRs above 4, or for reducing the number of CSRs back to 4, if necessary.
Note the following:
You do not have to use these instructions if you are increasing or decreasing the number of CSRs in a range between 2-4 CSRs.
Use these instructions only if you are increasing the number of CSRs above 4, or if you are decreasing the number of CSRs
from a range of 5-8 CSRs.
Changing the number of CSRs can impact traffic for up to 30 minutes.
Procedure
Step 1
Disable Azure VNet peering at the local level on all infra cloud context profiles.
Navigate to the Create Cloud Context Profile page:
Application Management > Cloud Context Profiles
Click the link under the Name column for the infra cloud context profile.
A panel showing details for this cloud context profile slides in from the right side of the window.
Click the Details icon ().
Another window appears that provides more detailed information for this cloud context profile.
Click the pencil icon in the upper right corner of the window.
The Edit Cloud Context Profile window appears.
Uncheck (disable) the Hub Network Peering field.
Click Save when finished.
Repeat these steps to disable Azure VNet peering on all infra cloud context profiles.
Step 2
If you are increasing the number of CSRs above 4, add additional subnet pools for the additional CSRs, if necessary.
You will see an error message is you attempt to increase the number of CSRs above 4 and the system determines that additional
subnet pools are required.
In the Cloud APIC GUI, click the Intent icon ( ) and select cAPIC Setup.
In the Region Management area, click Edit Configuration.
In the Regions to Manage window, click Next.
The General Connectivity window appears.
Under the General area, in the Subnet Pools for Cloud Routers field, click Add Subnet Pool for Cloud Routers if you want to add additional subnets for CSRs.
Addresses from this subnet pool will be used for inter-region connectivity for any additional regions that are added that
need to be managed by the Cloud APIC. This must be a valid IPv4 subnet with mask /24.
Step 3
Increase the number of CSRs above 4, or decrease the number of CSRs from a range of 5-8 CSRs.
In your Cloud APIC GUI, click the Intent icon ( ) and choose cAPIC Setup.
In the Region Management area, click Edit Configuration.
The Regions to Manage window appears.
Click Next to leave the previously-selected regions and CSRs as-is.
The General Connectivity window appears.
Locate the CSRs area in the General Connectivity window and, in the Number of Routers Per Region field, make the necessary changes to increase or decrease the number of CSRs.
Click Next, then enter the necessary information in the following page and click Save and Continue.
The process of adding or removing the CSRs might take roughly a half hour.
Step 4
Enable Azure VNet peering again at the local level on all infra cloud context profiles.
Navigate to the Create Cloud Context Profile page:
Application Management > Cloud Context Profiles
Click the link under the Name column for the infra cloud context profile.
A panel showing details for this cloud context profile slides in from the right side of the window.
Click the Details icon ().
Another window appears that provides more detailed information for this cloud context profile.
Click the pencil icon in the upper right corner of the window.
The Edit Cloud Context Profile window appears.
Check (enable) the Hub Network Peering field.
Click Save when finished.
Repeat these steps to enable Azure VNet peering on all infra cloud context profiles.
Private IP Address Support for Cisco Cloud APIC and Cisco Cloud Services Router
Prior to Release 5.1(2), Cisco Cloud Router (CSR) interfaces were assigned both public and private IP address by Cloud APIC.
Beginning with Release 5.1(2) , CSR interfaces are assigned private IP addresses only and assignment of public IP addresses
to CSR interfaces is optional. Private IP addresses are always assigned to all the interfaces of a CSR. The private IP of
GigabitEthernet1 of a CSR is used as BGP and OSPF router IDs. Hcloud with on-premise ACI sites over express route is supported
when CSRs are assigned private IP addresses. To enable private IP for a CSR, see Managing Regions (Configuring a Cloud Template) Using the Cisco Cloud APIC GUI procedure.
Prior to Release 5.1(2), the management interface of the Cloud APIC was assigned a public IP address and a private IP address.
Beginning with Release 5.1(2), a private IP address is assigned to the management interface of the Cisco Cloud APIC and assigning
a public IP address is optional. To enable private IP for Cloud APIC, see Deploying the Cloud APIC in Azure procedure in the Cisco Cloud APIC for Azure Installation Guide.
Restrictions for CSR with private IP address:
No support for multicloud deployments as intersite communication needs IPsec.
VRFs
A Virtual Routing and Forwarding (VRF) object (fvCtx) or context is a tenant network (called a VRF in the Cisco Cloud APIC GUI). A tenant can have multiple VRFs. A VRF is a unique
Layer 3 forwarding and application policy domain. The following figure shows the location of VRFs in the management information
tree (MIT) and their relation to other objects in the tenant.
A VRF defines a Layer 3 address domain. One or more cloud context profiles are associated with a
VRF. You can only associate one cloud context profile with a VRF in a given region. All
the endpoints within the Layer 3 domain must have unique IP addresses because it is
possible to forward packets directly between these devices if the policy allows it. A
tenant can contain multiple VRFs. After an administrator creates a logical device, the
administrator can create a VRF for the logical device, which provides a selection
criteria policy for a device cluster. A logical device can be selected based on a
contract name, a graph name, or the function node name inside the graph.
Support for Multiple VRFs Under Single VNet
Support is now available for multiple VRFs under a single VNet, depending on the APIC release:
Beginning with Release 5.0(2), you can have an infra (hub) VNet (a cloudCtxProfile in the infra tenant) that can be carved out into multiple VRFs. The cloud template subnets will be mapped to the overlay-1
VRF, but the user-created subnets will be implicitly mapped to the overlay-2 VRF in the same infra VNet. All subnets in the
respective VRFs will have separate route tables in the cloud for VRF segregation.
Beginning with Release 5.1(2), the ability to carve out multiple VRFs has been extended beyond the infra VNet so that you
can divide any VNet into multiple VRFs under the same tenant, where multiple VRFs can exist in a single VNet. This is useful
for situations such as cloud service access, where you might want to carve out multiple networks (VRFs) within a given VNet,
allowing you to have separate routing by having unique route tables for each VRF within the VNet in the cloud.
The following graphic shows an example manged object (MO) relationship tree with multiple VRFs under the same tenant (VNet).
In this example, two VRFs exist under the same tenant (VNet):
The primary VRF with the name mainVRF
A secondary VRF with the name servicesVRF
A second CIDR block and subnet exists in the same cloud context profile, under the same tenant (VNet), but that second CIDR
block and subnet is associated with the secondary VRF in that same VNet.
Cloud Application Profiles
A cloud application profile (cloudAp) defines the policies, services and relationships between cloud EPGs. The following figure shows the location of cloud application
profiles in the management information tree (MIT) and their relation to other objects in the tenant.
Cloud application profiles contain one or more cloud EPGs. Modern applications contain multiple components. For example, an
e-commerce application could require a web server, a database server, data located in a storage service, and access to outside
resources that enable financial transactions. The cloud application profile contains as many (or as few) cloud EPGs as necessary
that are logically related to providing the capabilities of an application.
Cloud EPGs can be organized according to one of the following:
The application they provide, such as a DNS server or SAP application (see Tenant Policy Example in Cisco APIC REST API Configuration Guide).
The function they provide (such as infrastructure)
Where they are in the structure of the data center (such as DMZ)
Whatever organizing principle that a cloud infrastructure or tenant administrator chooses to use
Cloud Endpoint Groups
The cloud endpoint group (cloud EPG) is the most important object in the policy model. The following figure shows where application
cloud EPGs are located in the management information tree (MIT) and their relation to other objects in the tenant.
A cloud EPG is a managed object that is a named logical entity that contains a collection of endpoints. Endpoints are devices
that are connected to the network. They have an address (identity), a location, attributes (such as version or patch level),
and are virtual. Knowing the address of an endpoint also enables access to all its other identity details. Cloud EPGs are
fully decoupled from the physical and logical topology. Endpoint examples include servers, virtual machines, storage services,
or clients on the Internet. Endpoint membership in a cloud EPG can be dynamic or static.
The ACI cloud infrastructure can contain the following types of cloud EPGs:
Cloud endpoint group (cloudEPg)
Cloud external endpoint group (cloudExtEPg)
Cloud service endpoint group (cloudSvcEPg): Introduced in Release 5.1(2). See Cloud Service Endpoint Groups for more information.
Cloud EPGs contain endpoints that have common policy requirements such as security or Layer 4 to Layer 7 services. Rather
than configure and manage endpoints individually, they are placed in a cloud EPG and are managed as a group.
Policies apply to cloud EPGs, never to individual endpoints.
Regardless of how a cloud EPG is configured, cloud EPG policies are applied to the endpoints they contain.
WAN router connectivity to the cloud infrastructure is an example of a configuration that uses a static cloud EPG. To configure
WAN router connectivity to the cloud infrastructure, an administrator configures a cloudExtEPg cloud EPG that includes any endpoints within an associated WAN subnet. The cloud infrastructure learns of the cloud EPG endpoints
through a discovery process as the endpoints progress through their connectivity life cycle. Upon learning of the endpoint,
the cloud infrastructure applies the cloudExtEPg cloud EPG policies accordingly. For example, when a WAN connected client initiates a TCP session with a server within an
application (cloudEPg) cloud EPG, the cloudExtEPg cloud EPG applies its policies to that client endpoint before the communication with the (cloudEPg) cloud EPG web server begins. When the client server TCP session ends, and communication between the client and server terminates,
the WAN endpoint no longer exists in the cloud infrastructure.
The Cisco Cloud APIC uses endpoint selectors to assign endpoints to Cloud EPGs. The endpoint selector is essentially a set of rules that are run
against the cloud instances that are assigned to the Azure VNET managed by Cisco ACI. Any endpoint selector rules that match
endpoint instances assign that endpoint to the Cloud EPG. The endpoint selector is similar to the attribute-based microsegmentation
available in Cisco ACI.
Cloud Service Endpoint Groups
A cloud service EPG, introduced in Release 5.1(2), is a managed object that is a named logical entity that contains a collection
of cloud native or third-party service instances or endpoints. In this situation, an endpoint refers to a particular service
instance. For example, an SQL server would be considered an endpoint, and a collection of SQL servers would form a service
endpoint group. Other examples of service EPGs would be a collection of Storage Accounts, a collection of Key Vaults, and
so on.
Service EPGs have several unique attributes:
Service Type: This attribute indicates what type of cloud service is being grouped. Examples of available service types include Azure SQL, Azure Containter Registery, Azure ApiManagement Services, and so on. The service type Custom is used when configuring a third-party service EPG.
Deployment Type: This attribute indicates how and where the service is deployed. Following are the available deployment types:
Cloud Native: In this type of deployment, the service is instantiated in the cloud provider's network and the user or applications consuming
it have a handle to the service. For example, an Azure storage account might reside inside Azure's own VNet, and you would
have a URL to access the storage contents.
Cloud Native Managed: In this type of deployment, the service is instantiated in your VNet or subnet (created through the Cisco Cloud APIC). For example, an Azure Kubernetes cluster (AKS) could be deployed in a subnet that is managed by the Cisco Cloud APIC.
Third-Party: This is a deployment where a third-party (not Azure) is providing services through the market place. Access to this service
is provided through the private links feature.
Access Type: This indicates how the service will be accessed. Following are the available access types:
Public: The service will be accessed using the public IP address assigned to it. Access to the public IP address range of a particular
service is achieved using the Azure "Service Tags" in the NSG rules.
Private: The service will be accessed using a private IP address assigned to it. This assignment is done through the creation of
private endpoints when the deployment is of type Cloud Native and Third-Party. In the case of a Cloud Native Managed deployment, the private IP is assigned by the service from the subnet IP space.
Only certain deployment types, and certain access types within each deployment type, are supported for each service type,
described in the previous bullets. The following table provides more information on the deployment types and access types
that are supported for each service type.
Service Type
Provider
Deployment Type/Access Type
Cloud Native
Cloud Native Managed
Third-Party
Azure Storage Blob
Microsoft.Storage
Private
N/A
N/A
Azure SQL
Microsoft.Sql
Public
Private
N/A
N/A
Azure Cosmos DB
Microsoft.DocumentDB
Public
Private
N/A
N/A
Azure Databricks
Microsoft.Databricks
Public
Private
Public and Private
N/A
Azure Storage
Microsoft.Storage
Public
Private
N/A
N/A
Azure Storage File
Microsoft.Storage
Private
N/A
N/A
Azure Storage Queue
Microsoft.Storage
Private
N/A
N/A
Azure Storage Table
Microsoft.Storage
Private
N/A
N/A
Azure Kubernetes Services (AKS)
Microsoft.ContainerService
Private
Private
Public and Private
N/A
Azure Active Directory Domain Services
Microsoft.AAD
Public
Private
Public and Private
N/A
Azure Container Registry
Microsoft.ContainerRegistry
Public
Private
N/A
N/A
Azure ApiManagement Services
Microsoft.ApiManagement
Public
Private
Public and Private
N/A
Azure Key Vault
Microsoft.KeyVault
Public
Private
N/A
N/A
Redis Cache
Microsoft.Cache
N/A
Private
Public and Private
N/A
Custom Service
Public
Private
N/A
Private
Service Endpoint Selectors: Service endpoints can be selected using the existing selectors (used in the cloud EPG selection) as well as the new types
of selectors listed below:
Resource Name: The service resource's name
Resource ID: The cloud provider's ID for the resource
URL: The alias or FQDN that identifies the service (the private link alias is used in Azure)
The following table provides more information on the endpoint selectors that are supported for each deployment type.
Note
Information for the Cloud Native (Public) deployment type is not provided in the following table because that deployment type
does not support endpoint selectors.
Deployment Type
Tags
Region
IP
Resource Name
Resource ID
URL
Cloud Native (Private)
Y
Y
N
Y
Y
N
Cloud Native Managed
N
N
Y
N
N
N
Third-Party
N
N
N
N
N
Y (applicable only for private link connection)
Guidelines and Restrictions for Cloud Service EPGs
You must have the NSG-per-subnet configuration enabled if you are configuring cloud service EPGs. See Security Groups for more information.
About Service Types
Additional information specific to certain service types are provided below:
The Azure Storage service type is a general service type that can be broken down into four subtypes:
Blob
File
Table
Queue
If you were to configure a service EPG with the following values, using the general Azure Storage service type:
Service type: Azure Storage
Deployment type: Cloud Native
Access type: Private
Then four private endpoints are automatically configured for this service EPG, one for each of the four subtypes listed above.
However, if you were to configure a service EPG with the following values, using a more specific Azure Storage service type:
Service type: One of these service types:
Azure Storage Blob
Azure Storage File
Azure Storage Table
Azure Storage Queue
Deployment type: Cloud Native
Access type: Private
Then only one private endpoint is automatically configured for this particular subtype for this service EPG.
Note that the four specific Azure Storage subtypes (Blob, File, Table, and Queue) are not allowed if you have an access type of Public with the deployment type of Cloud Native. This is because Azure service tags are not storage subtype specific.
Azure ApiManagement Services
For an Azure ApiManagement (APIM) Services instance to be deployed in a VNet, it needs to be able to access a lot of other
Azure services. In order to do this, the security group rules that allow this access must be programmed.
Cisco Cloud APIC automates this and configures the rules listed here:
Two subnets for deployment, where the subnets are delegated to Microsoft
For Azure Databricks, make the following configurations:
Before configuring the service EPG, you must configure two subnets specifically for the Azure Databricks Services.
When configuring the service EPG, you must create two service endpoint selectors that will be used to match the two service
subnets.
Once the subnet is identified with the Azure Databricks service EPG through the configured endpoint selectors, Cisco Cloud APIC delegates subnets to Azure and configures the rules listed here:
Azure Active Directory Domain Services (ADDS) requires the following:
Access to other services
No routing table is attached to the subnet when it is being deployed
The action of de-associating the routing table from the subnet should be done through the Azure portal after configuring the
service EPG and before deploying ADDS. The routing table can be attached to the subnet after the deployment is completed.
Cisco Cloud APIC automates the programming of the rules listed here:
In this type of deployment, the service is instantiated in the cloud provider's network and the user or applications consuming
it have a handle to the service. For example, an Azure storage account might reside inside Azure's own VNet, and you would
have a URL to access the storage contents.
The following is an example service EPG with a Cloud Native deployment type:
Service Type: Azure SQL
Deployment type: Cloud Native
Access type: Private
In this example scenario, you would make the following configurations in this order:
In the Cisco Cloud APIC GUI, create a private link label in a cloud context profile to be used by the Azure SQL service EPG.
When you are configuring the endpoint selector as part of the process of configuring this type of service EPG, configure the
endpoint selector to match the appropriate value for the SQL server.
For example, if you wanted to select an SQL server with the name ProdSqlServer, you would make the following selections:
Key: Name
Operator: equals
Value: ProdSqlServer
As another example, if you wanted to select an SQL server using the cloud provider's resource ID of /subscriptions/{subscription-id}/resourceGroups/{resourceGroupName}/providers/Microsoft.Sql/servers/ProdSqlServer, you would make the following selections:
In the Azure portal, configure the Azure SQL resources in the cloud.
Cloud Native Managed
In this type of deployment, the service is instantiated in your VNet or subnet (created through the Cisco Cloud APIC). For example, an Azure ApiManagement Services could be deployed in a subnet that is managed by the Cisco Cloud APIC.
The following is an example service EPG with a Cloud Native Managed deployment type:
Service Type: Azure ApiManagement Services
Deployment type: Cloud Native Managed
Access type: Private
In this example scenario, you would make the following configurations in this order:
In the Cisco Cloud APIC GUI, create a subnet in a cloud context profile to be used by the Azure ApiManagement Services service EPG.
When you are configuring the endpoint selector as part of the process of configuring this type of service EPG, configure the
endpoint selector to match the IP address that you used when you created a subnet in the cloud context profile in the first
step.
For example, using the example provided in the first step, you would configure this endpoint selector for this service EPG:
Key: IP
Operator: equals
Value: 10.50.0.0/16
In the Azure portal, configure the Azure ApiManagement Services resources in the cloud.
Security Groups
In Azure, two types of security groups are used to administer and control network traffic within a virtual network (VNet):
Network security groups: Network security groups, or NSGs, are used in Azure to filter network traffic to and from Azure resources. An NSG is used
to define incoming and outgoing security policies, and contains security rules that allow or deny inbound network traffic
to, or outbound network traffic from, several types of Azure resources. For each rule, you can specify source and destination,
port, and protocol.
In Cloud APIC, an NSG is automatically configured based on a contract.
Application security groups: Application security groups, or ASGs, are used in Azure to group virtual machine (VM) NICs according to the applications
that run on them and define network security policies based on those groups. ASGs are used within an NSG to define these security
polices and to apply a network security rule to a specific workload or group of virtual machines.
In Cloud APIC, an ASG is a collection of endpoints for each EPG and is referenced as the source or destination in the NSG security policies.
The way that these security groups are configured, and what they are mapped to, differ depending on the release.
Releases Prior to Release 5.1(2): NSG-Per-EPG Configurations
For releases prior to Release 5.1(2), there is a one-to-one mapping between NSGs in Azure and EPGs on Cisco Cloud APIC (these configurations are also referred to as NSG-per-EPG configurations throughout this document). These NSGs for the Cloud APIC EPGs are populated with security rules based on contracts associated with the EPGs.
For releases prior to Release 5.1(2), the creation of an EPG in Cloud APIC results in the creation of the following Azure components:
An ASG, which is used to group all endpoints or virtual machine NICs for each EPG based on the endpoint selectors
An NSG, which gets associated with all of the NICs in that ASG and provides the security policy definition for that EPG
Release 5.1(2) and Later: NSG-Per-Subnet Configurations
Beginning with Release 5.1(2), in addition to the existing NSG-per-EPG configurations available previously, NSGs in Azure
can also have a one-to-one mapping with subnets rather than EPGs on Cloud APIC (these configurations are also referred to as NSG-per-subnet configurations throughout this document). By default, NSGs are no longer created for EPGs beginning with Release 5.1(2),
and NSGs are no longer associated with the endpoints and VM NICs in the ASG for that EPG. Instead, the NSG for each subnet
will contain all of the rules based on the contracts for the ASGs, which have their endpoints discovered in the subnet.
For NSG-per-subnet configurations, the creation of an EPG in Cloud APIC results in the creation of the following Azure components:
An ASG, which is used to group all endpoints or virtual machine NICs for each EPG based on the endpoint selectors [essentially
no change in behavior for ASGs from releases prior to Release 5.1(2)]
An NSG, which continues to provide the security policy definition for that EPG, but now gets associated with a subnet in a
Cloud APIC-managed VNet
Looked at from another perspective:
Every EPG in a Cloud APIC-managed VNet will have an ASG associated with it, which will group all the endpoints based on the endpoint selectors configured
for the EPG.
Every subnet in a Cloud APIC-managed VNet will have an NSG associated with it.
The default setting for a Greenfield or a fresh Cloud APIC deployment is NSG-per-subnet. When manually setting this configuration, as described previously, you can choose either a newer NSG-per-subnet configuration or the older NSG-per-EPG configuration beginning with Release 5.1(2). However, we recommend choosing the newer NSG-per-subnet configuration for several reasons:
Using the NSG-per-subnet configuration reduces the number of NSGs in the VNet, and also reduces the number of rules for deployments with a large number
of subnets accessing common shared services. This provides for easier management, since all of the rules can be checked in
one NSG for a subnet, rather than for each NSG mapped to individual EPGs or ASGs.
You must use the NSG-per-subnet configuration if you are configuring service EPGs. See Cloud Service Endpoint Groups for more information.
Release 5.1(2g) and Later: IP-Based Rules for Inter-VRF Contracts in the Same VNet
Prior to release 5.1(2g), if two EPGs had a contract and were in the same VNet but belonged to different VRFs, ASG-based rules
were used to enable communication between those hosted VRFs in that VNet. Azure has a limit of 100 ASGs in rules for every
NSG, and this limit could be reached quickly in some situations (for example, if you have one VNet for all of your shared
services).
Beginning with release 5.1(2g), if two EPGs have a contract and are in the same VNet but belong to different VRFs, IP-based
rules are now used to enable communication between those hosted VRFs in that VNet, which is preferrable because an NSG can
support 4000 IP addresses in the rules. These IP-based rules are based on endpoints discovered or on subnet selectors used
in the EPG.
Guidelines and Limitations for ASGs and NSGs
Following are the guidelines and limitations for ASGs and NSGs.
Guidelines and Limitations for Releases Prior to 5.1(2)
For releases prior to Release 5.1(2), support is only available for NSG-to-EPG mapping for Cloud APIC.
Guidelines and Limitations for Release 5.1(2) or Later
Beginning with Release 5.1(2), support is also available for NSG-to-subnet mapping for Cloud APIC. However, you can have either the newer NSG-per-subnet configuration or the NSG-per-EPG configuration, but not both in the same Cloud APIC system.
You can configure one NSG per subnet in a Cloud APIC-managed VNET. Having one NSG per a group of subnets is not supported for
Cloud APIC at this time.
Passthrough devices, such as transparent firewall, will not have NSGs
attached to their NICs. If there are multiple passthrough devices sharing a
subnet, the passthrough rules for each device will apply to all endpoints in
the subnet.
Security Rules
The security rules for NSG differ, depending on whether they are rules for
NSG-per-EPG configurations or for NSG-per-subnet configurations. A major distinction
on the processing of the security rules between the two types of configurations is
the trigger for installing and deleting the rules.
Once the EPGs and the contract are defined on the Cloud APIC, the NSG security rules that use ASGs as the source and destination are
always programmed, regardless of whether an endpoint for the ASG that is
referenced in the NSG security rule is discovered or not.
For inter-VRF contracts:
If either the consumer or the provider EPG uses an endpoint selector based on subnet, then the NSG security rules that have
the source or destination as the subnet from the EPG selector are always programmed, regardless of the discovery of an endpoint.
If the consumer or provider EPG does not use an endpoint selector based on subnet, then the NSG security rules using the endpoint's
IP address as the source and destination are programmed, depending on the discovery of an endpoint.
The rules created for an inter-site contract, where a cloud external EPG (cloudExtEPg) is involved, also get pre-programmed without the endpoint getting discovered.
NSG-Per-Subnet Security Rules
The NSG security rules for an EPG are not programmed in a subnet-based NSG until the
EPG has at least one endpoint discovered in that subnet.
NSG Behavior With Software Upgrades or Downgrades
Because only NSG-per-EPG mapping is supported for releases prior to Release 5.1(2), and support for NSG-per-subnet mapping
became available beginning with Release 5.1(2), certain system configuration changes might have to take place when you are
upgrading or downgrading your software in certain situations. The following sections describe these situations and what must
occur during these upgrade or downgrade operations.
When you perform a standard upgrade from a release prior to Release 5.1(2) to Release 5.1(2) or later, NSGs that were configured
using the NSG-per-EPG mapping that was supported for the release prior to Release 5.1(2) will remain as-is after the upgrade.
This is because either NSG-per-EPG or NSG-per-subnet configurations are supported for Release 5.1(2) or later, so the older
NSG-per-EPG configurations will be retained automatically when performing a standard upgrade to Release 5.1(2) or later.
However, there are benefits to the NSG-per-subnet configuration, so we recommend that you convert the NSG-per-EPG configurations
to NSG-per-subnet to take advantage of those benefits. See Security Groups for more information on the different NSG configurations, and Configuring Network Security Groups Using the Cloud APIC GUI for instructions on enabling or disabling the NSG-per-EPG or NSG-per-subnet configurations.
Keep in mind that, after the upgrade, you can have either older NSG-per-EPG or the
newer NSG-per-subnet configuration, but you cannot have both in the same Cloud APIC system. See Guidelines and Limitations for ASGs and NSGs for more information.
However, if you backed up your existing Cloud APIC configuration using the procedures in Creating a Backup Configuration Using the Cisco Cloud APIC GUI, then performed an upgrade and imported the backed-up configuration after the upgrade, the NSG-per-subnet configuration is
turned on automatically, and any older NSG-per-EPG configurations are automatically converted to the newer NSG-per-subnet
configuration.
NSG Behavior With Software Downgrades
When you downgrade from Release 5.1(2) or later to a release prior to Release 5.1(2), you must manually move any NSG-per-subnet
configurations back to the NSG-per-EPG configuration that was supported for releases prior to Release 5.1(2).
Following is the general process that you will follow to transition from
NSG-per-subnet configurations to NSG-per-EPG configurations before downgrading the
software:
Before downgrading the software from Release 5.1(2) or later to a release prior to Release 5.1(2), disable the NSG-per-subnet
configuration using the procedures provided in Configuring Network Security Groups Using the Cloud APIC GUI. The Cloud APIC software begins the transition from NSG-per-subnet mapping to NSG-per-EPG mapping.
Wait until the transition is complete, where the Cloud APIC software has deleted all of the NSGs that were configured as part of the NSG-per-subnet mapping process and has created new
NSGs for the NSG-per-EPG mapping configuration. If you attempt to proceed with the downgrade before the transition is complete,
you will see an error message and the Cloud APIC software will not allow you to proceed with the downgrade until this transition from NSG-per-subnet mapping to NSG-per-EPG
mapping has completed.
Note
You will get an error message if you attempt a software downgrade before the transition is complete when downgrading through
the GUI; however, you will not get an error message if you attempt a software downgrade too early when downgrading through
the REST API. For that reason, we recommend that you do not downgrade your software through the REST API if you are in this
situation.
If you decide to downgrade your software through the REST API, monitor the following MO:
hcloudReconcileDone
Verify that the property sgForSubnetModeConverged is set to yes before proceeding with the downgrade through the REST API.
When you have confirmation that the system has successfully completed the transition back to the NSG-per-EPG mapping, you
can downgrade the Cloud APIC software using the instructions provided in the Cisco Cloud APIC for Azure Installation Guide.
Contracts
In addition to cloud EPGs, contracts (vzBrCP) are key objects in the policy model. Cloud EPGs can only communicate with other cloud EPGs according to contract rules.
The following figure shows the location of contracts in the management information tree (MIT) and their relation to other
objects in the tenant.
An administrator uses a contract to select one or more types of traffic that can pass between cloud EPGs, including the protocols
and ports allowed. If there is no contract, inter-EPG communication is disabled by default. There is no contract required
for intra-EPG communication; intra-EPG communication is always implicitly allowed.
Contracts govern the following types of cloud EPG communications:
Between cloud EPGs (cloudEPg), both intra-tenant and inter-tenant
Note
In the case of a shared service mode, a contract is required for inter-tenant communication. A contract is used to specify
static routes across VRFs, although the tenant VRF does not enforce a policy.
Between cloud EPGs and cloud external EPGs (cloudExtEPg)
Contracts govern the communication between cloud EPGs that are labeled providers, consumers, or both. The relationship between
a cloud EPG and a contract can be either a provider or consumer. When a cloud EPG provides a contract, communication with
the cloud endpoints in that cloud EPG can be initiated from cloud endpoints in other cloud EPGs as long as the communication
complies with the provided contract. When a cloud EPG consumes a contract, the cloud endpoints in the consuming cloud EPG
may initiate communication with any cloud endpoint in a cloud EPG that is providing that contract.
Note
A cloud EPG can both provide and consume the same contract. A cloud EPG can also provide and consume multiple contracts simultaneously.
Comma-separated Filters Support for Contract Rule Consolidation
After a contract is created, some of the rules defined in the contract are consolidated and displayed in Azure based on certain
criteria. You can combine multiple ports and multiple IP addresses and ranges into a single, easy-to-understand rule. The
criteria for consolidation of rules are:
Rules are consolidated only within a contract. Two rules resulting from two different contracts are not consolidated in Azure.
The source/ destination address prefixes and destination port(s) are consolidated.
The conditions for multiple rules to get consolidated together in an NSG are:
Same contract
Same protocol (UDP, TCP,ICMP)
Same direction (inbound , outbound)
Same type (SG, IP)
Overlapping port ranges for same protocol (TCP/UDP) in the same contract are consolidated to one range.
For example, TCP ports 100-200, 150-250 are consolidated to 100-250.
If 1.2.3.4/32 (any address prefixes) is allowed, and an ext EPG with 0.0.0.0/0 is added, then the allowed Source/Destination
IP would be Any, not [1.2.3.4/32, 0.0.0.0/0].
Example below shows the EPG1 outbound rules and the consolidated EPG1 outbound rules, based on contracts C1 and C2.
Filters and Subjects Govern Cloud EPG Communications
Subject and filter managed-objects enable mixing and matching among cloud EPGs and contracts so as to satisfy various applications
or service delivery requirements. The following figure shows the location of application subjects and filters in the management
information tree (MIT) and their relation to other objects in the tenant.
Contracts can contain multiple communication rules and multiple cloud EPGs can both consume and provide multiple contracts.
A policy designer can compactly represent complex communication policies and re-use these policies across multiple instances
of an application.
Note
Subjects are hidden in Cisco Cloud APIC and not configurable. For rules installed in Azure, source port provided in the filter
entry is not taken into account.
Subjects and filters define cloud EPG communications according to the following options:
Filters are Layer 3 to Layer 4 fields, TCP/IP header fields such as Layer 3 protocol type, Layer 4 ports, and so forth. According
to its related contract, a cloud EPG provider dictates the protocols and ports in both the in and out directions. Contract
subjects contain associations to the filters (and their directions) that are applied between cloud EPGs that produce and consume
the contract.
Subjects are contained in contracts. A subject within a contract uses filters to specify the type of traffic that can be communicated
and how it occurs. For example, for HTTPS messages, the subject specifies the direction and the filters that specify the IP
address type (for example, IPv4), the HTTP protocol, and the ports allowed. Subjects determine if filters are unidirectional
or bidirectional. A unidirectional filter is used in one direction. Unidirectional filters define in or out communications
but not the same for both. Bidirectional filters are the same for both; they define both in and out communications.
ACI contracts rendered in Azure constructs are always stateful, allowing return traffic.
About the Cloud Template
The cloud template provides a template that configures and manages the Cisco Cloud APIC infra network. The template requires
only the most essential elements for the configuration. From these elements, the cloud template generates a detailed configuration
necessary for setting up the Cisco Cloud APIC infra network. However, it is not a one-time configuration generation—it is
possible to add, modify, or remove elements of the template input. The cloud template updates the resulting configuration
accordingly.
One of the central things in the Azure network configuration is the Virtual Private Cloud (VNET). Azure supports many regions
worldwide and one VNET is specific to one region.
The cloud template accepts one or more region names and generates the entire configuration for
the infra VNETs in those regions. They are the infra VNETs. The Cisco Cloud APIC-managed
object (MO) corresponding to the Azure VNET is cloudCtxProfile. For
every region specified in the cloud template, it generates the
cloudCtxProfile configuration. A cloudCtxProfile
is the topmost MO for all the configuration corresponding to a region. Underneath, it
has many of other MOs organized as a tree to capture a specific configuration. The
cloudCtxProfile MO for the infra VNet is generated by the cloud
template. It carries ctxProfileOwner == SYSTEM, which means that this
MO is generated by the system. For the non-infra network, it is possible to configure
cloudCtxProfile directly; in this case,
cloudCtxProfile carries ctxProfileOwner ==
USER.
A primary property of an Azure VNet is the CIDR. In Cisco Cloud APIC, you can choose and
deploy CIDRs in the user VNets. The CIDRs for the infra VNet are provided by users to
the cloud template during the initial setup of the cloud site, and are deployed to the
Azure cloud by the cloud template.
Beginning with Release 5.0(2), a new property called createdBy is added
for the CIDR. The default value for this createdBy property is
USER.
For all user-created CIDRs, the value for the createdBy property
is set to USER.
For cloud template-created CIDRs, the value for the createdBy
property is set to SYSTEM.
In releases prior to Release 5.0(2), you are not allowed to add more CIDRs to the infra
VNet. Beginning with Release 5.0(2), multiple CIDR and subnet blocks can now be
configured on the infra VNet. You can create CIDRs and associate subnets in the infra
VNet. The cloud template subnets will be mapped to the overlay-1 VRF, but the
user-created subnets will be implicitly mapped to the overlay-2 VRF in the same infra
VNet. All subnets in the respective VRFs will have separate route tables in the cloud
for VRF segregation.
In addition, beginning with Release 5.0(2), you can create cloud EPGs and cloud external
EPGs in the infra tenant, where all the cloud EPGs and cloud external EPGs will be
associated with the overlay-2 VRF in the infra tenant. A cloud EPG in the overlay-2 VRF
can communicate with other cloud EPGs and cloud external EPGs in the overlay-2 VRF, and
can also communicate with cloud EPGS in other user tenant VRFs. We recommend that you do
not use existing "cloud-infra" application profiles, and instead create a new
application profile in the infra tenant and associate that new application profile to
the cloud EPGs and cloud external EPGs in the overlay-2 VRF.
The cloud template generates and manages a huge number of MOs in the cloudCtxProfile subtree including, but not limited to, the following:
Subnets
Cloud routers
IP address allocation for the cloud router interfaces
IP address allocation and configuration for tunnels
IP address allocation and configuration for loopbacks
Without the cloud template, you would be responsible for configuring and managing these.
The Cisco Cloud Template MO table contains a brief summary of the inputs (MOs) to the cloud template.
Table 1. Cloud Template MOs
MO
Purpose
cloudtemplateInfraNetwork
The root of the cloud template configuration. Attributes include:
numRoutersPerRegion—The number of cloud routers for each cloudRegionName specified under cloudtemplateIntNetwork.
cloudtemplateProfile
Configuration profile for all the cloud routers. Attributes include:
routerUsername
Note
The username cannot be "admin."
Any username restrictions from Azure applies.
routerPassword
routerThroughput
routerLicenseToken
routeDataInterfacePublicIP
routerMgmtInterfacePublicIP
cloudtemplateIntNetwork
Contains a list of regions, which specify where you deploy the cloud routers. Each region is captured through a cloudRegionName child MO
cloudtemplateExtNetwork
Contains infra network configuration input that is external of the cloud.
Contains a list of regions where cloud routers are configured for external networking.
Each region is captured through a cloudRegionName child MO
cloudtemplateVpnNetwork
Contains information for setting up a VPN with an ACI on-premises site or another Cisco Cloud APIC site.
cloudtemplateIpSecTunnel
Captures the IP address of the IPSec peer in the ACI on-premises site.
cloudtemplateOspf
Captures the OSPF area to be used for the VPN connections.
cloudtemplateBgpEvpn
Captures the peer IP address, ASN, and so forth, for setting up the BGP session with the on-premises site.
In Cisco Cloud APIC, the layering of MOs is slightly different from a regular Cisco APIC due to the cloud template. In a regular
Cisco APIC, you post logical MOs that go through two layers of translation:
Logical MO to resolved MO
Resolved MO to concrete MO
In Cisco Cloud APIC, there is an additional layer of translation for the infra network. This additional layer is where the
cloud template translates logical MOs in the cloudtemplate namespace to logical MOs in the cloud namespace. For configurations outside of the infra network, you post logical MOs in
the cloud namespace. In this case, the MOs go through the usual two-layer translation as in the regular Cisco APIC.
Relationship-managed objects express the relation between managed object instances that do not share containment (parent-child)
relations. MO relations are established between the source MO and a target MO in one of the following two ways:
An explicit relation, such as with cloudRsCloudEPgCtx, defines a relationship that is based on the target MO distinguished name (DN).
A named relation defines a relationship that is based on the target MO name.
The dotted lines in the following figure show several common MO relations.
For example, the dotted line between the cloud EPG and the VRF defines the relation between those two MOs. In this figure,
the cloud EPG (cloudEPg) contains a relationship MO (cloudRsCloudEPgCtx) that is named with the name of the target VRF MO (fvCtx). For example, if production is the VRF name (fvCtx.name=production), then the relation name is production (cloudRsCloudEPgCtx.tnFvCtxName=production).
In the case of policy resolution based on named relations, if a target MO with a matching name is not found in the current
tenant, the ACI cloud infrastructure tries to resolve in the common tenant. For example, if the user tenant cloud EPG contained
a relationship MO targeted to a VRF that did not exist in the tenant, the system tries to resolve the relationship in the
common tenant. If a named relation cannot be resolved in either the current tenant or the common tenant, the ACI cloud infrastructure
attempts to resolve to a default policy. If a default policy exists in the current tenant, it is used. If it does not exist,
the ACI cloud infrastructure looks for a default policy in the common tenant. Cloud context profile, VRF, and contract (security
policy) named relations do not resolve to a default.
Default Policies
Warning
Default policies can be modified or deleted. Deleting a default policy can result in a policy resolution process to complete
abnormally.
The ACI cloud infrastructure includes default policies for many of its core functions. Examples of default policies include
the following:
Cloud Azure provider (for the infra tenant)
Monitoring and statistics
Note
To avoid confusion when implementing configurations that use default policies, document changes made to default policies.
Be sure that there are no current or future configurations that rely on a default policy before deleting a default policy.
For example, deleting a default firmware update policy could result in a problematic future firmware update.
A default policy serves multiple purposes:
Allows a cloud infrastructure administrator to override the default values in the model.
If an administrator does not provide an explicit policy, the Cisco CloudAPIC applies the default policy. An administrator
can create a default policy and the Cisco Cloud APIC uses that unless the administrator provides any explicit policy.
The following scenarios describe common policy resolution behavior:
A configuration explicitly refers to the default policy: if a default policy exists in the current tenant, it is used. Otherwise,
the default policy in tenant common is used.
A configuration refers to a named policy (not default) that does not exist in the current tenant or in tenant common: if the
current tenant has a default policy, it is used. Otherwise, the default policy in tenant common is used.
Note
The scenario above does not apply to a VRF in a tenant.
A configuration does not refer to any policy name: if a default policy exists in the current tenant, it is used. Otherwise,
the default policy in tenant common is used.
The policy model specifies that an object is using another policy by having a relation-managed object (MO) under that object
and that relation MO refers to the target policy by name. If this relation does not explicitly refer to a policy by name,
then the system tries to resolve a policy that is called default. Cloud context profiles and VRFs are exceptions to this rule.
Shared Services
Cloud EPGs in one tenant can communicate with cloud EPGs in another tenant through a contract interface that is contained
in a shared tenant. Within the same tenant, a cloud EPG in one VRF can communicate with another cloud EPG in another VRF through
a contract defined in the tenant. The contract interface is an MO that can be used as a contract consumption interface by
the cloud EPGs that are contained in different tenants. By associating to an interface, a cloud EPG consumes the subjects
that are represented by the interface to a contract contained in the shared tenant. Tenants can participate in a single contract,
which is defined at some third place. More strict security requirements can be satisfied by defining the tenants, contract,
subjects, and filter directions so that tenants remain isolated from one another.
Follow these
guidelines when configuring shared services contracts:
A shared service is supported only with non-overlapping and non-duplicate CIDR subnets. When configuring CIDR subnets for
shared services, follow these guidelines:
CIDR subnets leaked from one VRF to another must be disjointed and must not overlap.
CIDR subnets advertised from multiple consumer networks into a VRF or vice versa must be disjointed and must not overlap.