Dual ISP on Hub, single ISP on Spoke-- 2 autoVPN tunnel ?

MirzaDz
Getting noticed

Dual ISP on Hub, single ISP on Spoke-- 2 autoVPN tunnel ?

Hello,

 

I have scenario like on picture below:

MirzaDz_0-1731311107420.png

So like you see we only have 2 different ISP on Hub/central location but only 1 ISP on spoke location. Is it possible to bring 2 autoVPN tunnel from Spoke Wan1 interface and play with sd-wan policises for vpn traffic? For example from 10 network to 20 go through autovpn tunnel 1, and from 10 to 30 through autovpn tunnel 2 and also one will be redundant to the other. For now i dont see option in sd-wan policy--vpn traffic that we can choose autovpn tunnel, only exit interface (WAN 1 and WAN 2).

 

Does anyone have experience with this scenario with MXs firewalls?

Best regards,

3 Replies 3
GIdenJoe
Kind of a big deal
Kind of a big deal

If your Hub and spoke locations are running in Routed/NAT mode and you have 2 ISP's at the hub and 1 ISP at the spoke you will essentially have 2 AutoVPN tunnels.  That means you will be able to control the traffic at the Hub but not at the spoke.

If you would have 2 ISP's at both locations you would have 4 tunnels.

 

As I have found earlier this year the SD-WAN uplink policies have effect in both upstream and downstream direction.  So if you match certain traffic at the hub site to take WAN1 it should leave via WAN1 but also arrive at WAN1.  This had been tested with simple L3/4 matching criteria.

MirzaDz
Getting noticed

Hello,

 

Thank you for your answer and explanation. Most of our traffic has direction from spokes to Hub. So if i understand you good, if we want that traffic from 10 network to 20 (on topology above from spoke to Hub ) go through autovpn tunnel 1 we need to create sd-wan policy--vpn traffic on Hub in oposite director from 20 to 10 and choose isp1 as exit point? Is there any place on Meraki dashboard that we can confirm this behavior?

 

Best regards,

pdeleuw
Getting noticed

You can disable Active-Active AutoVPN. Then the tunnel is built with the primary uplink. The secondary uplink is used, if the primary uplink fails.

Get notified when there are additional replies to this discussion.
Welcome to the Meraki Community!
To start contributing, simply sign in with your Cisco account. If you don't yet have a Cisco account, you can sign up.
Labels