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Bridge Mode

By implementing native layer-2 bridging instead of IP routing, you can add Virtual Systems without adversely affecting the existing IP structure.

When in the Bridge mode, Virtual System interfaces do not require IP addresses. You can optionally assign an IP address to the Virtual System itself (not the interfaces) to enable layer-3 monitoring, which provides network fault detection functionality.

VSX supports these Bridge mode models:

Included Topics

Spanning Tree Protocol (STP) Bridge Mode

Active/Standby Bridge Mode

Spanning Tree Protocol (STP) Bridge Mode

The Spanning Tree Protocol is an industry standard technology to prevent loops in high-speed switched networks. To use the STP Bridge mode, you must have STP deployed and properly configured on your network. These STP layer-2 protocols are supported:

See your vendor documentation to learn how to deploy and configure STP on your network hardware.

Active/Standby Bridge Mode

The Active/Standby Bridge Mode enhances both High Availability (for significant improvements) and Virtual System Load Sharing in VSX clustered environments (VSLS) (for throughput distributed among Virtual Systems).

Active/Standby Bridge Mode has these advantages:

The principal limitation of the Active/Standby Bridge Mode is that it breaks the STP tree structure.

Note - When configuring a Virtual System in the Active/Standby Bridge Mode, you should remove Virtual System VLANs from the STP database in the switches. This action prevents delays due to trunk interface failback.

Deployment Scenarios

This section presents illustrative Active/Standby Bridge Mode deployments, which cannot function using a standard STP Bridge mode configuration.

VLAN Shared Interface Deployment

In this deployment, each member connects to pair of redundant switches through a VLAN trunk. All Virtual Systems in a given member share the same VLAN trunk.

With Active/Standby Bridge Mode in High Availability mode, ClusterXL directs traffic to members according to administrator -defined priorities and status. In Virtual System Load Sharing deployments, the system distributes the traffic load amongst members according to your Virtual System Load Sharing configuration.

Three Layer Hierarchical Model

A three-layer hierarchical model is used in large, high-traffic network environments.

  1. A core network, with high-speed backbone switches that direct traffic to and from the Internet and other external networks.
  2. A distribution layer, with routers, for connectivity between the core and the access layer.
  3. An access layer, with redundant LAN switches, that forward traffic to and from internal networks.

VSX in Active/Standby Bridge Mode is incorporated in the distribution layer, enforcing the security policy.

The routers direct external traffic to the appropriate Virtual System through a segregated VLAN. Inspected traffic exits the Virtual System through a separate segregated VLAN, to the routers and then to internal destinations.