Management Center: Configure Cluster, Data Interfaces

This procedure configures basic parameters for each data interface that you assigned to the cluster when you deployed it in FXOS. For clustering on multiple chassis, data interfaces are always Spanned EtherChannel interfaces. For the cluster control link interface for a cluster isolated to security modules within one Firepower 9300 chassis, you must increase the MTU from the default.

Note

When using Spanned EtherChannels for clustering on multiple chassis, the port-channel interface will not come up until clustering is fully enabled. This requirement prevents traffic from being forwarded to a unit that is not an active unit in the cluster.

Procedure


Step 1

Choose Devices > Device Management, and click Edit (edit icon) next to the cluster.

Step 2

Click Interfaces.

Step 3

Configure the cluster control link.

For clustering on multiple chassis, set the cluster control link MTU to be at least 100 bytes higher than the highest MTU of the data interfaces. Because the cluster control link traffic includes data packet forwarding, the cluster control link needs to accommodate the entire size of a data packet plus cluster traffic overhead. We suggest setting the MTU to the maximum of 9184; the minimum value is 1400 bytes. For example, because the maximum MTU is 9184, then the highest data interface MTU can be 9084, while the cluster control link can be set to 9184.

For native clusters: The cluster control link interface is Port-Channel48 by default. If you don't know which interface is the cluster control link, check the FXOS configuration for chassis for the Cluster-type interface assigned to the cluster.

  1. Click Edit (edit icon) for the cluster control link interface.

  2. On the General page, in the MTU field, enter a value between 1400 and 9184but not between 2561 and 8362. Due to block pool handling, this MTU size is not optimal for system operation. We suggest using the maximum, 9184.

  3. Click OK.

Step 4

Configure data interfaces.

  1. (Optional) For regular firewall interfaces, configure VLAN subinterfaces on the data interface. The rest of this procedure applies to the subinterfaces. See Add a Subinterface.

  2. Click Edit (edit icon) for the data interface.

  3. Configure the name and other parameters. For regular firewall interfaces, see Configure Routed Mode Interfaces or, for transparent mode, Configure Bridge Group Interfaces. For IPS-only interfaces, see Inline Sets and Passive Interfaces..

    Note

    If the cluster control link interface MTU is not at least 100 bytes higher than the data interface MTU, you will see an error that you must reduce the MTU of the data interface. See, Step 3 to increase the cluster control link MTU, after which you can continue configuring the data interfaces.

  4. For clustering on multiple chassis, set a manual global MAC address for the EtherChannel. Click Advanced, and in the Active Mac Address field, enter a MAC address in H.H.H format, where H is a 16-bit hexadecimal digit.

    For example, the MAC address 00-0C-F1-42-4C-DE would be entered as 000C.F142.4CDE. The MAC address must not have the multicast bit set, that is, the second hexadecimal digit from the left cannot be an odd number.

    Do not set the Standby Mac Address; it is ignored.

    You must configure a MAC address for a Spanned EtherChannel to avoid potential network connectivity problems. With a manually-configured MAC address, the MAC address stays with the current control unit. If you do not configure a MAC address, then if the control unit changes, the new control unit uses a new MAC address for the interface, which can cause a temporary network outage.

  5. Click OK. Repeat the above steps for other data interfaces.

Step 5

Click Save.

You can now go to Deploy > Deployment and deploy the policy to assigned devices. The changes are not active until you deploy them.