Planning Your Versa Secure SD-WAN Deployment
This topic provides an overview of the provisioning process and describes deployment considerations for the Megaport Virtual Edge (MVE).
You Provide | Megaport Provides |
---|---|
Internet connection from branch | Platform to host virtual SD-WAN appliances |
SD-WAN vendor enabled at branch | Complete connection from a branch to any destination on the Megaport network and interoperation with other Megaport products and services |
Customer premises equipment (CPE) installed in branch | Distributed denial-of-service (DDoS) connection to the internet to terminate tunnel between MVE and CPE at branch |
SD-WAN software license to use on Megaport SDN | Access to the Megaport ecosystem |
Deployment considerations
This section provides an overview of the MVE deployment options and features.
SD-WAN vendors
MVE is integrated with Versa Secure SD-WAN, which uses Versa’s Director console to create the private overlay network.
Additional SD-WAN providers include Aruba SD-WAN, Cisco SD-WAN, Fortinet Secure SD-WAN, and VMware SD-WAN.
Versa Secure SD-WAN features
Versa Secure SD-WAN focuses on these key capabilities:
- SD-WAN and Secure Access Service Edge (SASE) - A single platform with a best-of-class security offering. See Securing the Network with SASE.
- One software stack - A single-pipeline integrated architecture for security, advanced networking, robust analytics, and automation.
The Versa Operating System (VOS) delivers both next-generation firewall (NGFW) and SD-WAN services on a single virtual machine. The VOS appliance deployed as a virtual machine on MVE not only optimizes edge-to-cloud network connectivity, but also enforces advanced security services and policies across the Megaport backbone segments.
Versa SASE gateway functionality can also be deployed on MVE as part of the many VOS capabilities. Versa refers to this deployment model as private gateways, which offer the same functionality as Versa Cloud Gateways but instead run on a customer or service provider platform.
The highly flexible VOS hosted on MVE provides these core SASE services:
- Cloud access security broker (CASB)
- Next-generation firewall (NGFW)
- Secure web gateway (SWG)
- Zero trust network access (ZTNA)
The Versa Secure Access Client (VSAC) is the endpoint security agent that extends SD-WAN and security services to client devices. The VSAC provides Intelligent Gateway Selection, allowing the client to connect to a Versa Cloud Gateway or a private gateway (on MVE). The VSAC policies steer client network traffic based on the specific application. For example, client network traffic for a real-time financial trading application hosted in AWS can be routed through VOS on MVE, whereas traffic for a cloud-based file storage repository can be routed through the Versa Cloud Gateway.
For details, go to VOS Versa Operating System and Versa Secure Access.
MVE locations
For a list of global locations where you can connect to an MVE, see Megaport Virtual Edge Locations.
Sizing your MVE instance
The instance size determines the MVE capabilities, such as how many concurrent connections it can support. The MVE instances are consolidated into these sizes:
Package Size | vCPUs | DRAM | Storage | Internet Access * |
---|---|---|---|---|
MVE 2/4/20 | 2 | 4 GB | 80 GB | 20 Mbps |
MVE 4/8/20 | 4 | 8 GB | 80 GB | 20 Mbps |
MVE 2/4/100 | 2 | 4 GB | 80 GB | 100 Mbps |
MVE 4/8/200 | 4 | 8 GB | 80 GB | 200 Mbps |
MVE 2/4/500 | 2 | 4 GB | 80 GB | 500 Mbps |
MVE 4/8/1000 | 4 | 8 GB | 80 GB | 1000 Mbps |
MVE 8/16/5000 | 8 | 16 GB | 80 GB | 5000 Mbps |
MVE 12/24/5000 | 12 | 24 GB | 80 GB | 5000 Mbps |
* Internet access is symmetric, redundant, and diverse, and includes DDoS protection.
These performance and capacity metrics are estimates and your speeds will vary. When choosing an MVE instance size, keep in mind these items:
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Any increase on the network data stream load can degrade performance. For example, establishing secure tunnels with IPsec, adding traffic path steering, or using deep packet inspection (DPI) can impact the maximum throughput speed.
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Future plans to scale the network.
What if I need more MVE capacity in the future?
You can:
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Provision another MVE instance, add it to your SD-WAN overlay network, and split the workload between the two MVEs.
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Provision a larger MVE instance, add it to your SD-WAN overlay network, migrate connections from the old MVE to the new larger MVE, and then retire the old MVE.
Security
MVE provides capacity to and from your internet-enabled branch locations securely, to any endpoint or service provider on Megaport ONE’s SDN. CSP-hosted instances of partner SD-WAN products route critical traffic across Megaport ONE’s SDN, reducing internet dependence. Traffic remains encrypted and under your policy control while traveling across the Megaport ONE SDN, to or from, MVE.
Each MVE subscription includes distributed denial-of-service (DDoS) attack protection for no additional charge.
Versa Secure SD-WAN includes access to a comprehensive security feature: Secure Access Service Edge (SASE). Versa on MVE natively supports SASE and SD-WAN services. For details, see Securing the Network with SASE.
Licensing
You bring your own Versa (Director) SD-WAN license for use with MVE. It is your responsibility to have the appropriate licenses for the SD-WAN endpoints created on the Megaport network.
VLAN tagging
Megaport uses Q-in-Q to differentiate VXCs and MVEs on a host hardware system. The tenant MVE receives untagged traffic for the internet-facing link, and single-tagged 802.1Q traffic for VXCs toward other destinations on the Megaport network (such as CSP onramps or other MVEs).