Use SD-WAN rules to steer multicast traffic NEW
SD-WAN rules can now steer multicast traffic. When an SD-WAN member is out of SLA, multicast traffic can fail over to another SD-WAN member, and switch back when SLA recovers.
The new pim-use-sdwan
option enables or disables the use of SD-WAN for PIM (Protocol Independent Multicast) when checking RP (Rendezvous Point) neighbors and sending packets.
config router multicast config pim-sm-global set pim-use-sdwan {enable | disable} end end
When SD-WAN steers multicast traffic, ADVPN is not supported. Use the config system sdwan config service edit <id> set shortcut {enable | disable} next end end |
Example 1
In this hub and spoke example, the PIM source is behind the hub FortiGate, and the RP is set to internal port (port2) of the hub firewall. Each spoke connects to the two WAN interfaces on the hub by using an overlay tunnel. The overlay tunnels are members of SD-WAN.
Receivers behind the spoke FortiGates request a stream from the source to receive traffic on tunnel1 by default. When the overlay tunnel goes out of SLA, the multicast traffic fails over to tunnel2 and continues to flow.
Following is an overview of how to configure the topology:
- Configure the hub FortiGate in front of the PIM source. The RP is configured on internal port (port2) of the hub FortiGate.
- Configure the spoke FortiGates.
- Verify traffic failover.
To configure the hub:
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On the hub, enable multicast routing, configure the multicast RP, and enable PIM sparse mode on each interface:
config router multicast set multicast-routing enable config pim-sm-global config rp-address edit 1 set ip-address 172.16.205.1 next end end config interface edit "tport1" set pim-mode sparse-mode next edit "tagg1" set pim-mode sparse-mode next edit "port2" set pim-mode sparse-mode next end end
To configure each spoke:
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Enable SD-WAN with the following settings:
- Configure the overlay tunnels as member of the SD-WAN zone.
- Configure a performance SLA health-check using ping.
- Configure a service rule for the PIM protocol with the following settings:
- Use the lowest cost (SLA) strategy.
- Monitor with the ping health-check.
- Disable ADVPN shortcut.
config system sdwan set status enable config zone edit "virtual-wan-link" next end config members edit 1 set interface "tunnel1" next edit 2 set interface "tunnel2" next end config health-check edit "ping" set server "172.16.205.1" set update-static-route disable set members 0 config sla edit 1 next end next end config service edit 1 set mode sla set protocol 103 set dst "all" config sla edit "ping" set id 1 next end set priority-members 1 2 set use-shortcut-sla disable set shortcut disable next edit 2 set mode sla set dst "all" config sla edit "ping" set id 1 next end set priority-members 1 2 next end end
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Enable multicast routing and configure the multicast RP. Enable PIM sparse-mode on each interface:
config router multicast set multicast-routing enable config pim-sm-global set spt-threshold disable set pim-use-sdwan enable config rp-address edit 1 set ip-address 172.16.205.1 next end end config interface edit "tunnel1" set pim-mode sparse-mode next edit "tunnel2" set pim-mode sparse-mode next edit "port4" set pim-mode sparse-mode next end end
To verify traffic failover:
With this configuration, multicast traffic starts on tunnel1. When tunnel1 becomes out of SLA, traffic switches to tunnel2. When tunnel1 is in SLA again, the traffic switches back to tunnel1.
The following health-check capture on the spokes shows tunnel1 in SLA with packet-loss (1.000%):
# diagnose sys sdwan health-check Health Check(ping): Seq(1 tunnel1): state(alive), packet-loss(0.000%) latency(0.056), jitter(0.002), mos(4.404), bandwidth-up(999999), bandwidth-dw(1000000), bandwidth-bi(1999999) sla_map=0x1 Seq(2 tunnel2): state(alive), packet-loss(0.000%) latency(0.100), jitter(0.002), mos(4.404), bandwidth-up(0), bandwidth-dw(0), bandwidth-bi(0) sla_map=0x1 # diagnose sys sdwan health-check Health Check(ping): Seq(1 tunnel1): state(alive), packet-loss(1.000%) latency(0.056), jitter(0.002), mos(4.404), bandwidth-up(999999), bandwidth-dw(1000000), bandwidth-bi(1999999) sla_map=0x1 Seq(2 tunnel2): state(alive), packet-loss(0.000%) latency(0.100), jitter(0.002), mos(4.404), bandwidth-up(0), bandwidth-dw(0), bandwidth-bi(0) sla_map=0x1
The following example shows tunnel1 out of SLA with packet-loss (3.000%):
# diagnose sys sdwan health-check Health Check(ping): Seq(1 tunnel1): state(alive), packet-loss(3.000%) latency(0.057), jitter(0.003), mos(4.403), bandwidth-up(999999), bandwidth-dw(1000000), bandwidth-bi(1999999) sla_map=0x0 Seq(2 tunnel2): state(alive), packet-loss(0.000%) latency(0.101), jitter(0.002), mos(4.404), bandwidth-up(0), bandwidth-dw(0), bandwidth-bi(0) sla_map=0x1
The following example shows tunnel1 back in SLA again:
# diagnose sys sdwan health-check Health Check(ping): Seq(1 tunnel1): state(alive), packet-loss(1.000%) latency(0.061), jitter(0.004), mos(4.404), bandwidth-up(999999), bandwidth-dw(1000000), bandwidth-bi(1999999) sla_map=0x0 Seq(2 tunnel2): state(alive), packet-loss(0.000%) latency(0.102), jitter(0.002), mos(4.404), bandwidth-up(0), bandwidth-dw(0), bandwidth-bi(0) sla_map=0x1 # diagnose sys sdwan health-check Health Check(ping): Seq(1 tunnel1): state(alive), packet-loss(0.000%) latency(0.061), jitter(0.004), mos(4.404), bandwidth-up(999999), bandwidth-dw(1000000), bandwidth-bi(1999999) sla_map=0x0 Seq(2 tunnel2): state(alive), packet-loss(0.000%) latency(0.102), jitter(0.002), mos(4.404), bandwidth-up(0), bandwidth-dw(0), bandwidth-bi(0) sla_map=0x1
The following example how traffic switches to tunnel2 while tunnel1 health-check is out of SLA. Source (172.16.205.11) sends traffic to the multicast group. Later the traffic switches back to tunnel1 once SLA returns to normal:
195.060797 tunnel1 in 172.16.205.11 -> 225.1.1.1: icmp: echo request 195.060805 port4 out 172.16.205.11 -> 225.1.1.1: icmp: echo request 196.060744 tunnel1 in 172.16.205.11 -> 225.1.1.1: icmp: echo request 196.060752 port4 out 172.16.205.11 -> 225.1.1.1: icmp: echo request 197.060728 tunnel1 in 172.16.205.11 -> 225.1.1.1: icmp: echo request 197.060740 port4 out 172.16.205.11 -> 225.1.1.1: icmp: echo request 198.060720 tunnel2 in 172.16.205.11 -> 225.1.1.1: icmp: echo request 198.060736 port4 out 172.16.205.11 -> 225.1.1.1: icmp: echo request 199.060647 tunnel2 in 172.16.205.11 -> 225.1.1.1: icmp: echo request 199.060655 port4 out 172.16.205.11 -> 225.1.1.1: icmp: echo request 200.060598 tunnel2 in 172.16.205.11 -> 225.1.1.1: icmp: echo request 200.060604 port4 out 172.16.205.11 -> 225.1.1.1: icmp: echo request ... ... ... ... 264.060974 port4 out 172.16.205.11 -> 225.1.1.1: icmp: echo request 265.060950 tunnel2 in 172.16.205.11 -> 225.1.1.1: icmp: echo request 265.060958 port4 out 172.16.205.11 -> 225.1.1.1: icmp: echo request 266.060867 tunnel2 in 172.16.205.11 -> 225.1.1.1: icmp: echo request 266.060877 port4 out 172.16.205.11 -> 225.1.1.1: icmp: echo request 267.060828 tunnel2 in 172.16.205.11 -> 225.1.1.1: icmp: echo request 267.060835 port4 out 172.16.205.11 -> 225.1.1.1: icmp: echo request 268.060836 tunnel1 in 172.16.205.11 -> 225.1.1.1: icmp: echo request 268.060854 port4 out 172.16.205.11 -> 225.1.1.1: icmp: echo request 269.060757 tunnel1 in 172.16.205.11 -> 225.1.1.1: icmp: echo request 269.060767 port4 out 172.16.205.11 -> 225.1.1.1: icmp: echo request 270.060645 tunnel1 in 172.16.205.11 -> 225.1.1.1: icmp: echo request 270.060653 port4 out 172.16.205.11 -> 225.1.1.1: icmp: echo request
Example 2
In this hub and spoke example, the PIM source is behind spoke 1, and the RP is configured on the hub FortiGate. BGP is used for routing. The hub uses embedded SLA in ICMP probes to determine the health of each tunnel, allowing it to prioritize healthy IKE routes.
The receiver is on another spoke. Upon requesting a stream, source passes the traffic to the RP on the hub FortiGate, and routes the traffic to the receiver over tunnel1. If a tunnel falls out of SLA, the multicast traffic fails over to the other tunnel.
In this configuration, SD-WAN steers multicast traffic by using embedded SLA information in ICMP probes. See also Embedded SD-WAN SLA information in ICMP probes. With this feature, the hub FortiGate can use the SLA information of the spoke's health-check to control BGP and IKE routes over tunnels.
Following is an overview of how to configure the topology:
- Configure the hub FortiGate. The RP is configured on the hub FortiGate.
- Configure the spoke FortiGate in front of the traffic receiver.
- Configure the spoke FortiGate in front of the PIM source.
To configure the hub:
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Configure loopbacks hub-lo1 172.31.0.1 for BGP and hub-lo100 172.31.100.100 for health-check:
config system interface edit "hub-lo1" set vdom "hub" set ip 172.31.0.1 255.255.255.255 set allowaccess ping set type loopback set snmp-index 82 next edit "hub-lo100" set vdom "hub" set ip 172.31.100.100 255.255.255.255 set allowaccess ping set type loopback set snmp-index 81 next end
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Enable multicast routing with the following settings:
- Configure internal interface p25-v90 as RP.
- Enable interfaces for PIM sparse-mode.
config router multicast set multicast-routing enable config pim-sm-global config rp-address edit 1 set ip-address 192.90.1.11 next end end config interface edit "p11" set pim-mode sparse-mode next edit "p101" set pim-mode sparse-mode next edit "p25-v90" set pim-mode sparse-mode next end end
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Enable SD-WAN with the following settings:
- Add interfaces p11 and p101 as members.
- Configure embedded SLA health-checks to detect ICMP probes from each overlay tunnel. Prioritize based on the health of each tunnel.
config system sdwan set status enable config zone edit "virtual-wan-link" next end config members edit 1 set interface "p11" next edit 2 set interface "p101" next end config health-check edit "1" set detect-mode remote set probe-timeout 60000 set recoverytime 1 set sla-id-redistribute 1 set members 1 config sla edit 1 set link-cost-factor latency set latency-threshold 100 set priority-in-sla 10 set priority-out-sla 20 next end next edit "2" set detect-mode remote set probe-timeout 60000 set recoverytime 1 set sla-id-redistribute 1 set members 2 config sla edit 1 set link-cost-factor latency set latency-threshold 100 set priority-in-sla 15 set priority-out-sla 25 next end next end end
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Configure BGP to peer with neighbors. Neighbor group is configured for tunnel interface IP addresses:
config router bgp set as 65505 set router-id 172.31.0.1 set ibgp-multipath enable set additional-path enable set recursive-inherit-priority enable config neighbor-group edit "gr1" set remote-as 65505 set update-source "hub-lo1" set additional-path both set route-reflector-client enable next end config neighbor-range edit 1 set prefix 10.10.0.0 255.255.0.0 set neighbor-group "gr1" next edit 66 set prefix 172.31.0.66 255.255.255.255 set neighbor-group "gr1" next end config network .... edit 90 set prefix 192.90.0.0 255.255.0.0 next end end
To configure the spoke (in front of the receiver):
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Enable multicast routing to use SD-WAN. Configure the RP address. Enable interfaces for PIM sparse-mode.
config router multicast set multicast-routing enable config pim-sm-global set spt-threshold disable set pim-use-sdwan enable config rp-address edit 1 set ip-address 192.90.1.11 next end end config interface edit "p195" set pim-mode sparse-mode next edit "p196" set pim-mode sparse-mode next edit "internal4" set pim-mode sparse-mode set static-group "225-1-1-122" next end end
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Configure SD-WAN with the following settings:
- Add overlay tunnel interfaces as members.
- Configure a performance SLA health-check to send ping probes to the hub.
- Configure a service rule for the PIM protocol. Use the lowest cost (SLA) strategy, and monitor with the ping health-check.
- Disable ADVPN shortcuts.
config system sdwan set status enable config zone edit "virtual-wan-link" next end config members edit 6 set interface "p196" next edit 5 set interface "p195" next end config health-check edit "ping" set server "172.31.100.100" set update-static-route disable set members 0 config sla edit 1 set link-cost-factor latency set latency-threshold 100 next end next end config service edit 1 set mode sla set protocol 103 set dst "all" config sla edit "ping" set id 1 next end set priority-members 5 6 set use-shortcut-sla disable set shortcut disable next edit 2 set mode sla set dst "all" config sla edit "ping" set id 1 next end set priority-members 5 6 next end end
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Configure BGP and set neighbors to the overlay gateway IP address on the hub:
config router bgp set as 65505 set router-id 122.1.1.122 set ibgp-multipath enable set additional-path enable config neighbor edit "10.10.100.254" set soft-reconfiguration enable set remote-as 65505 set connect-timer 10 set additional-path both next edit "10.10.101.254" set soft-reconfiguration enable set remote-as 65505 set connect-timer 10 set additional-path both next end config network edit 3 set prefix 192.84.0.0 255.255.0.0 next end end
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Configure the default gateway to use the SD-WAN zone. Other routes are for the underlay to route traffic to the hub's WAN interfaces:
config router static edit 10 set distance 1 set sdwan-zone "virtual-wan-link" next .... next end
To configure the spoke (in front of the source):
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Enable multicast routing to use SD-WAN. Configure the RP address. Enable interfaces for PIM sparse-mode:
config router multicast set multicast-routing enable config pim-sm-global set pim-use-sdwan enable config rp-address edit 1 set ip-address 192.90.1.11 next end end config interface edit "p198" set pim-mode sparse-mode next edit "p200" set pim-mode sparse-mode next edit "npu0_vlink0" set pim-mode sparse-mode next end end
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Configure loopback interface lo66 for BGP and sourcing SD-WAN traffic:
config system interface edit "lo66" set vdom "root" set ip 172.31.0.66 255.255.255.255 set allowaccess ping set type loopback set snmp-index 21 next end
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Configure SD-WAN:
- Add overlay tunnel interfaces as members.
- Configure a performance SLA health-check to send ping probes to the hub.
- Configure a service rule for the PIM protocol. Use the lowest cost (SLA) strategy, and monitor with the ping health-check.
- Disable the use of an ADVPN shortcut.
In the following example, 11.11.11.11 is the underlay address for one of the WAN links on the hub, and 172.31.100.100 is the loopback address on the server.
config system sdwan set status enable config zone edit "virtual-wan-link" next edit "overlay" next end config members edit 1 set interface "p198" set zone "overlay" set source 172.31.0.66 next edit 2 set interface "p200" set zone "overlay" set source 172.31.0.66 next end config health-check edit "ping" set server "11.11.11.11" set members 0 config sla edit 1 set link-cost-factor latency set latency-threshold 100 next end next edit "HUB" set server "172.31.100.100" set embed-measured-health enable set members 0 config sla edit 1 set link-cost-factor latency set latency-threshold 100 next end next end config service edit 1 set mode sla set protocol 103 set dst "all" config sla edit "ping" set id 1 next end set priority-members 1 2 set use-shortcut-sla disable set shortcut disable next edit 2 set mode sla set dst "all" config sla edit "ping" set id 1 next end set priority-members 1 2 next end end
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Configure BGP:
config router bgp set as 65505 set router-id 123.1.1.123 set ibgp-multipath enable set additional-path enable config neighbor edit "172.31.0.1" set next-hop-self enable set soft-reconfiguration enable set remote-as 65505 set update-source "lo66" next end config network edit 3 set prefix 192.87.0.0 255.255.0.0 next end end
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Configure the default gateway to use the SD-WAN zone. Other routes are for the underlay to route to the hub's WAN interfaces:
config router static edit 10 set distance 1 set sdwan-zone "virtual-wan-link" "overlay" next ... next end