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Considerations When Planning a Deployment of C Series Controllers
When you plan an SRC deployment, take into
consideration requirements for security and high availability to comply
with your organization’s standard practices:
- Hardware redundancy—Because each C Series Controller
contains all SRC core components, the platforms can provide redundancy
for each other. If a C Series Controller is inaccessible, other platforms
can manage the routers, services, and subscribers.
In the event of a hardware failure, one C Series
Controller can be replaced with another one. The Juniper Networks
database and the SAE synchronize with the software on other platforms.
During routine system maintenance and software upgrades, a C Series
Controller can be taken out of service then returned to service and
the data synchronized.
- High availability
for the Juniper Networks database—The database provides a robust
redundancy scheme that you can customize for your deployment. The
configuration lets you specify which databases are primary and which
are secondary, and how data is propagated among a number of databases.
- High availability
for SRC components —Components such as SAE and NIC let you configure
high availability separately for each software component, which means
that software redundancy can be configured as a mesh over a number
of C Series Controllers.
- Secure remote access—Remote access to the SRC CLI
can be set up through Telnet or SSH and to the C-Web interface through
http or https.
- Directory connections—You can secure connections
between the directory and other applications through secure LDAP.
- Web applications—Applications can leverage the security
configured for your Web application server.
- RADIUS server—Because RADIUS is stateless, you can
configure a sufficient number of RADIUS servers for the load, and
you can configure both the routers and the SAE to load balance across
them.
- Common Open Policy Service (COPS) connections— Routers
running JUNOSe Software can be configured with primary, secondary,
and tertiary COPS servers, so it is possible to configure many failover
schemes. This flexibility lets you locate backup SAEs remotely to
provide geographical redundancy or close to the routers they manage
to improve network performance.
It is also possible for SAE servers to redirect
existing and new COPS connections to other, more lightly loaded SAE
servers. This COPS connection redirection can be triggered manually
during a scheduled maintenance window or automatically based on SAE
load monitoring.
- Load balancing for the network information collector (NIC)—You
can provide load balancing for the NIC in the following ways:
- Deploy two or more NIC hosts that each have the same configuration,
and then configure NIC proxies to load balance across the NIC hosts.
- Run the NIC hosts locally in the Dynamic Service Activator
(DSA).
- For NIC scenarios that require an SAE plug-in to track
data about individual subscribers for a deployment in a large network,
deploy NIC hosts to handle parts of the network with a different set
of NIC hosts to aggregate requests.
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