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Aruba Shared & Distributed License

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  • 1.  Aruba Shared & Distributed License

    Posted Feb 06, 2013 02:43 PM

    i knew that 6.3 will provide Shared & Distributed License   , i want to understand more detals about that ... is this related to HA using VRRP  or Master/Local ?  is there a document showing details ?

     



  • 2.  RE: Aruba Shared & Distributed License

    Posted Feb 09, 2013 06:18 AM

    Hi , i was trying to find any dosumnet explaining that but cannot find , do any of you  have ?

     



  • 3.  RE: Aruba Shared & Distributed License
    Best Answer

    EMPLOYEE
    Posted Feb 09, 2013 07:00 AM

    That does not exist because 6.3 has not been announced.  We also don't know if shared licensing will exist, either.



  • 4.  RE: Aruba Shared & Distributed License

    Posted Feb 09, 2013 11:50 AM

    Thx :)



  • 5.  RE: Aruba Shared & Distributed License

    Posted Sep 03, 2013 07:11 PM

    6.3 is now available under the early deployment folder. The release notes provide a decent explination of the feature, but as is typical with the Aruba docs...it is a little confusing.

     

    Centralized Licensing
    Centralized licensing simplifies licensing management by distributing AP, PEFNG, RF PRotect, xSec and ACR
    licenses installed on one controller to other controllers on the network. One controller to act as a centralized license
    database for all other controllers connected to it, allowing all controllers to share a pool of unused licenses. The
    primary and backup licensing server can share single set of licenses, eliminating the need for a redundant license set
    on the backup server. Local licensing client controllers maintain information sent from the licensing server even if
    licensing client controller and licensing server controller can no longer communicate.
    You can use the centralized licensing feature in a master-local topology with a redundant backup master, or in a
    multi-master network where all the masters can communicate with each other (for example, if they are all connected
    to a single Airwave server). In the master-local topology, the master controller acts as the primary licensing server,
    and the redundant backup master acts as the backup licensing server. In a multi-master network, one controller must
    be designated as a primary server and a second controller configured as a backup licensing server.
    Enable and configure this feature using the Configuration > Controller > Centralized Licenses tab in the WebUI,
    or using the licensing profile commands in the command-line interface.

    Primary and Backup Licensing Servers
    Centralized licensing allows the primary and backup licensing server controllers share a single set of licenses. If you
    do not enable this feature, the master and backup master controller each require separate, identical license sets. The
    two controllers acting as primary and backup license servers must use the same version of ArubaOS, and must be
    connected on the same broadcast domain using the Virtual Router Redundancy Protocol (VRRP). Other client
    controllers on the network connect to the licensing server using the VRRP virtual IP address configured for that set
    ArubaOS 6.3.0.1 | Release Notes Features Added in Previous 6.3 Releases | 25
    26 | Features Added in Previous 6.3 Releases ArubaOS 6.3.0.1 | Release Notes
    of redundant servers. By default, the primary licensing server uses the configured virtual IP address. However, if the
    controller acting as the primary licensing server becomes unavailable, the secondary licensing server will take
    ownership of the virtual IP address, allowing licensing clients to retain seamless connectivity to a licensing server.
    Only one backup licensing server can be defined for each primary server.

    Communication between the License Server and License Clients
    When you enable centralized licensing, information about the licenses already installed on the individual client
    controllers are sent to the licensing server, where they are added into the server’s licensing table. The information in
    this table is then shared with all client controllers as a pool of available licenses. When a client controller uses a
    license in the available pool, it communicates this change to the licensing server master controller, which updates
    the table before synchronizing it with the other clients.

    Client controllers do not share information about factory-installed or built-in licenses to the licensing server. A
    controller using the centralized licensing feature will use its built-in licenses before it consumes available licenses
    from the license pool. As a result, when a client controller sends the licensing server information about the licenses
    that client is using, it only reports licenses taken from the licensing pool, and disregards any built-in licenses used.
    For example, if a controller has a built-in 16-AP license and twenty connected APs, it will disregard the built-in
    licenses being used, and will report to the licensing server that it is using only four AP licenses from the license pool.
    When centralized licensing is first enabled on the licensing server, its licensing table only contains information about
    the licenses installed on that server. When the clients contact the server, the licensing server adds the client
    licenses to the licensing table, then it sends the clients back information about the total available licenses for each
    license type. In the following example, the licenses installed on two client controllers are imported into the license
    table on the license server. The licensing server then shares the total number of available licenses with other
    controllers on the network. When new AP associates with a licensing client, the client sends updated licensing information to the server. The licensing server then recalculates the available total, and sends the revised license count back to the clients. If a
    client uses an AP license from the license pool, it also consumes a PEFNG and RF Protect license from the pool,
    even if that AP has not enabled any features that would require that license.



  • 6.  RE: Aruba Shared & Distributed License

    Posted Nov 19, 2013 03:02 PM

    So, my question is if you have a master redundancy with VRRP already can you enable the centralized license and designate the master priamry as the license primary and the standby master as the backup license server?   It appears from the configuration tab for centeralized licenses that you would have to disable the master redundancy and break the configuration link first while keeping VRRP configured.  You then would no longer have the configuration synced, so two separate master controllers just in VRRP for AP traffic.   So to keep from manually syncing the config you would then have to convert the old redunancy stanby to a 'local' controller so configs from the master are pushed to it again (for all the non local config options).    The aruba-master hostname would still get pointed to the VRRP VIP address and if there was a VRRP failover to the 'local' it would be using the pool licenses as the DB existed before the failure and continue to terminate the APs...

     

    Is that correct?