Stateless (regular) and stateful failover, Stateless (regular) failover – Cisco ASA 5505 User Manual

Page 1297

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61-9

Cisco ASA 5500 Series Configuration Guide using the CLI

Chapter 61 Information About High Availability

Stateless (Regular) and Stateful Failover

Note

The ASA 5505 does not support multiple context mode or Active/Active failover.

VPN is not supported in multiple context mode or Active/Active failover.

If you are running the ASA in multiple context mode, then you can configure either Active/Active
failover or Active/Standby failover.

To allow both members of the failover pair to share the traffic, use Active/Active failover. Do not
exceed 50% load on each device.

If you do not want to share the traffic in this way, use Active/Standby or Active/Active failover.

Table 61-1

provides a comparison of some of the features supported by each type of failover

configuration.

Stateless (Regular) and Stateful Failover

The ASA supports two types of failover, regular and stateful. This section includes the following topics:

Stateless (Regular) Failover, page 61-9

Stateful Failover, page 61-10

Stateless (Regular) Failover

When a failover occurs, all active connections are dropped. Clients need to reestablish connections when
the new active unit takes over.

Note

In Version 8.0 and later, some configuration elements for clientless SSL VPN (such as bookmarks and
customization) use the VPN failover subsystem, which is part of Stateful Failover. You must use Stateful
Failover to synchronize these elements between the members of the failover pair. Stateless (regular)
failover is not recommended for clientless SSL VPN.

Table 61-1

Failover Configuration Feature Support

Feature

Active/Active

Active/Standby

Single Context Mode

No

Yes

Multiple Context Mode

Yes

Yes

Traffic Sharing Network Configurations

Yes

No

Unit Failover

Yes

Yes

Failover of Groups of Contexts

Yes

No

Failover of Individual Contexts

No

No

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