Cisco ACI Virtual Edge Release Notes, Release 1.1(1b)
This document describes the features, bugs, and limitations for the Cisco Application Centric Infrastructure (ACI) Virtual Edge Switch software.
Note: Use this document in combination with the Cisco Application Policy Infrastructure Controller (APIC) Release Notes, which you can view at the following location:
Release notes are sometimes updated with new information about restrictions and bugs. See this website for the most recent version of this document.
Table 1 shows the online change history for this document.
Table 1 Online History Change
| Date |
Description |
| 2018-05-02 |
Cisco ACI Virtual Edge Release 1.1(1b) became available. |
| 2019-01-03 |
Added statement in Limitations and Restrictions section that Cisco ACI Virtual Edge is not supported for Cisco ACI Multi-Site environments. Removed statement in vMotion Support section that vMotion across Cisco ACI Multi-Site is not supported. |
| 2019-06-11 |
Added section about Cisco ACI Virtual Edge requirements and performance. |
| 2021-03-25 |
Added bug CSCvq34172 to the Open Bugs section. |
This document includes the following sections:
Introduction: Cisco ACI Virtual Edge
Cisco ACI Virtual Edge Software Compatibility
Cisco ACI Virtual Edge Requirements
Cisco ACI Virtual Edge is a hypervisor-independent distributed service virtual machine (VM) that is specifically designed for Cisco ACI. It leverages the native distributed virtual switch that belongs to the hypervisor. Cisco ACI Virtual Edge runs in the user space, operates as a virtual leaf, and is managed by Cisco APIC. If you use Cisco AVS, you can migrate to Cisco ACI Virtual Edge; if you use VMware VDS, you can run Cisco ACI Virtual Edge on top of it.
Cisco ACI Virtual Edge supports two modes of traffic forwarding: local switching and no local switching. The forwarding mode is selected during Cisco ACI Virtual Edge installation.
Cisco ACI Virtual Edge is supported as a vLeaf for Cisco APIC with the VMware ESXi hypervisor. It manages a data center defined by the VMware vCenter Server.
Cisco ACI Virtual Edge is compatible with any upstream physical access layer switch that complies with the Ethernet standard, including Cisco Nexus switches. Cisco ACI Virtual Edge is compatible with any server hardware listed in the VMware Hardware Compatibility Guide.
Cisco ACI Virtual Edge Release 1.1(1b) is supported as a vLeaf for Cisco APIC with releases 6.0 and later versions of the VMware ESXi hypervisor.
Cisco ACI Virtual Edge Release 1.1(1b) is compatible with Cisco APIC 3.1(1i) and later versions.
The Cisco ACI Virtualization Compatibility Matrix provides interoperability information for Cisco ACI components and configurations that have been tested and validated by Cisco, by Cisco partners, or both.
Cisco ACI Virtual Edge is compatible with any server hardware listed in the VMware Hardware Compatibility List.
Virtual Edge requires:
· 2 virtual CPUs
· 4 GB of RAM
· 8 GB hard drive
· 3 vNICs
At initial release, Cisco ACI Virtual Edge can deliver 10Gbps on a 2-vCPU footprint.
Cisco ACI Virtual Edge provides most of the functionality of the Cisco AVS solution, including support for VLAN and VXLAN encapsulation, Microsegmentation with Cisco ACI, and Distributed Firewall. Cisco ACI Virtual Edge also provides near-seamless migration from Cisco AVS and VMware VDS.
Note: When you install or configure Cisco ACI Virtual Edge, you may see Cisco ACI Virtual Edge options labeled Cisco AVE or AVE.
For Cisco ACI Virtual Edge scalability information, see the Verified Scalability Guide for Cisco ACI for the relevant Cisco APIC release.
Cisco ACI Virtual Edge is available only on the VMware hypervisor at initial release.
Cisco ACI Virtual Edge is supported only on VMware vSphere 6.0 and later versions.
· The server where you install Cisco ACI Virtual Edge must have an Intel Nehalem CPU or later. You also must set the cluster Enhanced vMotion Compatibility (EVC) to a Nehalem CPU or later. See the knowledge base article Enhanced vMotion Compatibility (EVC) processor support (1003212) on the VMware web site.
· Cisco ACI Virtual Edge installation is supported only on local data stores in the current release. Installation on remote data stores (SAN) will be supported in a future release.
· We recommend that you install only one Cisco ACI Virtual Edge virtual machine (VM) on each host.
· Removing Cisco ACI Virtual Edge or the ESXi host from the VMware vCenter and then adding it back in is not supported. If you do that, Cisco ACI Virtual Edge loses password, infra VLAN, IP address, and other key configurations. You should instead delete the original Cisco ACI Virtual Edge and deploy a new one.
· After you deploy Cisco ACI Virtual Edge, if the Cisco ACI Virtual Edge VM is moved across VMware vCenter, all the configurations that you made during deployment are lost.
The Cisco ACI Virtual Edge management interface must have an IPv4 address. It can have an additional IPv6 address, but you cannot configure it with only an IPv6 address.
Cisco ACI Virtual Edge is not supported for Cisco ACI Multi-Site environments.
vMotion is supported for endpoints but not supported for Cisco ACI Virtual Edge itself.
The following features are not supported for Cisco ACI Virtual Edge with multipod in the Cisco APIC 3.1(1) release:
· L3 Multicast
· Storage vMotion with two separate NFS in two separate PODs
· ERSPAN destination in different PODs
· Distributed Firewall syslog server in different PODs
When you set EPG resolution immediacy, Cisco ACI Virtual Edge does not support pre-provisioning, which downloads a policy to a switch before the switch is installed.
Permission Denied for some Files on vem-support with Admin Login
When you log in as an administrator, you may be denied some files when you enter a vem-support command. However, you can get permission if you log in as root.
Brief Delay Possible When Switching EPG from Native to AVE Mode
Changing the switching mode from Native to AVE (Cisco ACI Virtual Edge) on an EPG requires changing the underlying switching platform from regular VMware DVS to Cisco ACI Virtual Edge. It also requires moving all the associated ports from DVS to Cisco ACI Virtual Edge.
This operation requires reprogramming of the port group associated with that EPG. That in turn requires a VMware vCenter operation. This operation may take a few seconds to complete and for ports to show up in forwarding state on the Cisco ACI Virtual Edge switching platform. Its length of time depends on the vCenter load as well as the number of endpoints that reside on the EPG that is being moved from Native to AVE mode.
Table 3 lists the open bugs in Cisco ACI Virtual Edge Release 1.1(1b):
Table 3 – Open Cisco ACI Virtual Edge bugs
| Bug ID |
Headline |
| Port removed on source ACI Virtual Edge on vMotion failure event causing traffic loss (for silent host only) |
|
| Bulk vMotion of 50 or more ports per host incurs delays for ports to come to FORWARD state |
|
| Ports not freed and gets exhausted on continuous vMotion while moving between uSegs |
|
| Cisco ACI Virtual Edge: Jumbo frames fail with VMware ESXi 6.7U2 |
The compatible Cisco APIC version contains bug fixes; see the Cisco APIC Release Notes.
Table 4 lists the closed bugs in Cisco ACI Virtual Edge Release 1.1(1b):
Table 4 – Closed Cisco ACI Virtual Edge bugs
| Bug ID |
Headline |
| Cisco ACI Virtual Edge is not correctly handling less than 60-byte Ethernet frame |
|
| Cisco ACI Virtual Edge: In headless mode, vMotion did not detach on old Cisco ACI Virtual Edge SVM |
|
| DPA core seen in build Cisco ACI Virtual Edge |
|
| Cisco ACI Virtual Edge: Changing memory reservation from 3G to 4G |
Cisco ACI Virtual Edge documentation is available at the following URL:
Cisco APIC documentation is available at the following URL:
Cisco APIC documentation includes the Cisco ACI Virtualization Guide, which provides detailed information about Distributed Firewall and Microsegmentation with Cisco ACI.
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