| Netscreen - NSRP |
| Vendor | Juniper |
| Platform | Netscreen |
| Version | ScreenOS 6.2 |
| Firewalls - Juniper - Netscreen |
| Friday, 04 September 2009 00:00 |
HA SetupsThere are 3 main types of HA setup, they are,
HA Feature SetsSOHOThis allows for you to configure a secondary untrust interface. Of which in the event of failure the secondary link will become active, in order to restore connectivity. You can use either the available serial port or ethernet port for your secondary link, allowing you to connect ADSL Modems or Routers. The various commands are below, ns5gt-> exec failover force <- failover manual To allow the link to stabilize there is a default hold down timer of 30secs. If required you can modify this by using the command, ns5gt-> set failover hold-down [number of seconds] SOHO only monitors the link between the Netscreen and the modem or the router. So if there is a problem with the ISP service the Netscreen will not failover. NSRP-LiteThis allows for Active/Passive setup with configuration synchronization. But does not provide Run-Time Object synchronization (discussed later) or an Active/Active setup. NSRPNSRP is the protocol that allows clustered Netscreens to communicate with each other and allows them to exchange state information. Which in turn allows them to make the required decisions to ensure traffic is still passed in the event of failure. When NSRP is enabled a VSD (Virtual Security Device) is created, along with the configuration of the physical interfaces being applied to VSI`s Virtual Security Interfaces. Each VSD belongs to a VSD group. In each VSD group, one VSD is nominated as a master VSD. Each VSD will sit on each firewall. Only the master VSD (Active firewall) will pass the traffic. Along with this the IP addresses assigned to a VSI follow the master VSD. With regards to the management IP`s these stay static to each firewall.
NSRP StatesAt any one time each VSD can be in one of 6 states.
Initial - Occurs when a VSD is first created due to reboot or configuration change. While in this state the VSD learns other devices in the VSD group, syncs the state with other VSD`s, and elections for which VSD should be master. The Master VSD is determined,
A fail over can be caused by any of the following,
Cluster Traffic2 types of packets are exchanged over HA Links. These are control messages and data packets.
To check if both devices are in sync run the command, ns5gt-> clear db NSRP Track IPInterface Track IP and VPN monitoring are not included with NSRP. NSRP Tracking allows you to fail across your cluster in the event of IP`s becoming unreachable. Such as a router IP. This allows for failovers in the event of a Netscreen interface or switch port failing.
In the event of failover this would prevent the failed interface from moving to the other VSD. RTO MirroringReal-Time Object mirroring allows dynamic based information to be synchronized between the cluster nodes, such as DHCP leases, VPN sessions etc. ns5gt-> set nsrp cluster id1 With some insecure protocols you may wish to disable sessions created by a certain policy from being mirrored when dealing with DoS attacks.To change this,
Split BrainSplit Brain is a situation where the HA link fails and in turn both devices believe the other device has failed and then promotes itself to master. There are 3 methods in which you can prevent this situation from arising,
ns5gt-> adding a secondary path "No Brain" SituationIn this situation both switches/switch ports fail. Both firewalls may be plugged into the same switch or different switches which may fail due to power failure etc. This causes both firewalls to place themselves into an inoperable state and then backup. Causing both firewalls to be in a backup state. To ensure that one device is always master you can use the command, ns5gt-> set nsrp vsd-group master-always-exists The main issue with this occurs in a situation where both switches/switch ports fail for one network (i.e trust) and then a switch/switch port fails on the active node. In this case the cluster will not fail across to the secondary node even though it is the best candiate for master. |
Latest Articles
- Tool - SSLReport
- Brocade ADX - How to perform an image upgrade
- Cisco ASA reboots/crashes when running the command 'show service-policy interface outside set connection detail'
- Brocade ADX - Persistence
- How to define a port range on a Juniper SRX
- Path MTU Discovery (PMTUD) / Path MTU Black Holes
- Mitigating DoS attacks on a Cisco ASA
- How do I clear the Cisco ASA connection counters ?
- High CPU Usage on a Cisco CSS
- How to clone a MySQL database
- Brocade ADX - Configuring SSL
- Brocade ADX - Content Switching Rewrite
- Joomla - How to add a custom field
- BigIP F5 LTM - How to Create a Sorry Page with Image
- BigIP F5 LTM - TCP Syslog
- Cisco ASA - Traffic blocked when TCP syslog server is unreachable
- Excel - Unable to open file
- Brocade ADX - DoS Protection
- Brocade ADX - LoadBalancing Methods
- Brocade ADX - Healthcheck Elements
Popular
- Proxy ARP – SPLAT
- Check Point Commands
- IPSO - Commands
- ASA 8.3 - How to configure NAT
- vSphere - Creating User and Group Permissions
- PEMU - Free Cisco PIX Firewall Emulator / Simulator
- Juniper Netscreen Commands
- Juniper - NAT Explained
- Configuring Wireless Connectivity within Backtrack 4 r2
- ESX Convertor - The session is not authenticated
- How do I install snmpwalk / snmpget using Yum ?
- Netscreen - NSRP
- ESX - ViClient Cannot connect to host
- Troubleshooting a Netscreen Site 2 Site VPN
- Endpoint Connect Installation / Troubleshooting Guide
- ESXi - Connecting to a named pipe
- Check Point - How to Reset SIC
- ESXi White Box - HP DL140
- DNS / nslookup - How to find the root servers ?
- Netscreen - Routing Basics / Virtual Routers / PBR

