Licensing
IP Fabric has a straightforward licensing concept. One license is consumed for every physical or virtual device in the network, excluding wireless access points.
For example:
- A router with multiple VRFs counts as only one device in the license count.
- Each virtual instance on a firewall (VSYS, VDOM, etc.) counts as one license each. If you have one firewall with 80 virtual instances, it will count as 80 devices in the license count.
- A stack of switches (StackWise, etc.) count as one device in the license, regardless of the number of switches in the stack.
- For wireless access points, a single license is consumed by the centralized controller, regardless of the number of APs controlled by it.
- For cloud infrastructure providers, one license is consumed by each networking construct (VPC, gateway, etc.). For details, see What Counts Against IP Fabric License in Cloud below.
Info
If IP Fabric cannot detect the device type of a discovered device (due to missing information from the CLI or API calls), the device will be counted as unlicensed.
What Counts Against IP Fabric License in Cloud
AWS
One license is consumed by each networking object (VPC, gateway, etc.). Currently, these are at least:
AWS Networking Object | IP Fabric |
---|---|
Direct Connect gateway | dxgw |
Internet gateway | igw |
NAT gateway | nat |
Transit gateway | tgw |
VPC endpoint | vpce |
VPC | vpc |
VPN gateway | vgw |
Azure
One license is consumed by each networking object (VNet, gateway, etc.). Currently, these are at least:
Azure Networking Object | IP Fabric |
---|---|
Express Route gateway | erg |
NAT gateway | nat |
Virtual HUB | vhub |
Virtual Network | vnet |
Virtual Network gateway | vngw |
VPN gateway | vpngw |
GCP
One license is consumed by each networking object. Currently, these are at least:
GCP Networking Object | IP Fabric |
---|---|
VPC | vpc |
Router | router |
Changes
Release 4.4.0
Starting from version 4.4.0
, every device (virtual or physical) will consume
one license. This now applies to devices where information is collected via CLI
or API. The only exception is wireless access points, which do not consume any
licenses.
This change in licensing will affect the following vendors:
- SD-WAN – Versa, Viptela, Silver Peak
- Wireless access points – Meraki, Juniper MIST
- Cloud infrastructure – AWS, Azure
Releases <= 4.3.x
For versions 4.3.x
or older, every device (virtual or physical) with
information collected via CLI will consume one license. Any devices with
information collected via API would not consume a license. Examples of
API-collected devices are SD-WAN (Versa, Viptela, Silver Peak), cloud wireless
(Meraki), and cloud infrastructure (AWS).
Expired License
When your license expires:
- You will not be able to log in to the IP Fabric main GUI.
- New snapshots will not be created, and automatic snapshots will stop.
- API calls may still work.
- Configuration management will run in the background.