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ni_67218's avatar
ni_67218
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Dec 07, 2012

why a traffic group must only have a mac address?

why a traffic group must only have a mac address?

 

6 Replies

  • do you mean mac masquerading? i understand because traffic group is object which will float to another device in failover device group.
  • one traffic group can have many ips And these Ips can in different vlans . Why a taffic group must only have a mac address.
  • this might not be direct answer for your question. anyway, if you want to use different mac masquerading, you can create multiple traffic group.
  • Dr__W_97433's avatar
    Dr__W_97433
    Historic F5 Account

    In v11, there can be up to 8 devices in a sync/failover device group. This means that the max amount of standby devices for any given traffic group is 7. If the MAC address for virtual IPs is assigned to the VLAN (stationary on the physical device) as opposed to the traffic group, your virtual traffic objects will change their layer 2 mappings up to 7 different times when the traffic group experiences a failover. For customers that want to ensure that the layer 2 mapping is consistent with their virtual traffic objects, the MAC masquerading must be assigned at the level of the traffic group. This causes less churn in the ARP tables of upstream/downstream switches. Additionally, this makes configuration a lot more straightforward. Instead of manually having to set up the masqueraded MAC address on each standby device, one only needs to set up on the traffic group. Finally, because an active device can support multiple traffic groups, it makes troubleshooting more straight forward, by preventing multiple traffic groups from sharing the same MAC address of the VLAN.