Route Policies Tab
Configuration > Templates & Policies > Policies > Route Policies
Use the Route Policies tab to view route policies that exist on the appliances selected in the appliance tree. This includes the appliance-based defaults, entries applied manually by using the Appliance Manager or CLI, and entries that result from applying an Orchestrator Route Policies template or Business Intent Overlay (if you are deploying an SD-WAN).
To directly manage route policies for a particular appliance, click the associated edit icon. To create and manage route policies with a template, click Manage Route Policies with Templates.
For details about fields on this tab, see Route Policies Dialog Box below.
Route Policies Dialog box
Use the Route Policies tab to directly manage route policies for a particular appliance.
The default behavior for each appliance is to auto-optimize all IP traffic, automatically directing flows to the appropriate tunnel. Auto-optimization strategies reduce the need to create explicit route map entries for optimization. The three strategies provided are:
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TCP-based auto-opt
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IP-based auto-opt
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Subnet sharing
By default, all three are enabled on the Route Policies template.
Route policies only require entries for flows that are to be:
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Sent passthrough (shaped or unshaped)
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Dropped
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Configured for a specific high-availability deployment
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Routed based on application, VLAN, DSCP, or ACL (Access Control List)
When multiple tunnels exist to a remote peer, you can create a route policy entry that enables the appliance to dynamically select the best path based on one of these criteria:
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Load balancing
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Lowest loss
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Lowest latency
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Specified tunnel
If you are deploying an SD-WAN network and setting up Internet breakout from the branch, you must create manual route policy entries for sanctioned SaaS applications or Guest WiFi.
Priority
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If you are using Orchestrator templates to add rules, Orchestrator will delete all entries from 1000 – 9999 before applying its policies.
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You can create rules with higher priority than Orchestrator rules (1 – 999) and rules with lower priority (10000 – 19999 and 25000 – 65534).
NOTE: The priority range from 20000 to 24999 is reserved for Orchestrator.
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When adding a rule, the priority is incremented by 10 from the previous rule. The priority can be changed, but this default behavior helps to ensure you can insert new rules without having to change subsequent priorities.
Match Criteria
Match criteria are used universally across all policy maps for route, QoS, optimization, SaaS NAT, and firewall zone security policies.
To use the same match criteria in different maps, create an ACL (Access Control List), which is a named, reusable set of rules. For efficiency, navigate to Configuration > Templates & Policies > ACLs > Access Lists to create ACLs, and then apply them across your appliances.
Use the Match Criteria dialog box to select and configure a variety of match criteria options. Some are explained below:
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Address Map: Use this option to sort by country, IP address owner, or SaaS application. You can also select and configure Microsoft Instance, Microsoft Category, and Proxy attributes for an address map. These attributes are secondary parameters to the address map. They are evaluated for a policy match only when the configured address map matches the flow. To select and configure these attributes, click +Attributes.
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Match criteria options related to Secure Web Services include:
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URL: Omit the protocol in URLs and include a slash character (/) or a slash followed by a query parameter. For example,
google.com/orgoogle.com/mapsare valid;https://google.com/is not valid. You can also use the asterisk (*) wildcard character, such as ingoogle.com/*, to specify a domain, but it is more appropriate to use the Domain match criteria option to specifygoogle.com/. Separate multiple URL addresses with the pipe character (|). For example, you can specify two URL addresses asbing.com/*|google.com/*. -
Web Category: If you select this option, click Select, and then click Strict, Moderate, or Custom. Strict and Moderate include predetermined web category selections, which you cannot change. However, if you attempt to select or clear a web category for these, the Custom group of web category selections opens automatically. You can customize web category selections in the Custom group. After you make your selections, click Ok.
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Web Reputation: If you select this option, select one or more web reputation categories (High Risk, Suspicious, Moderate Risk, Low Risk, or Trustworthy) from the list. To select more than one, press and hold the Shift key, and then click the appropriate categories.
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Bad IP Reputation: Selecting this option matches on flows for which the source or destination IP address (or both) has a High Risk reputation score.
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Match criteria options related to RADIUS user role include:
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User Role: This is the user role as specified in the authentication exchange with the ClearPass RADIUS server.
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User Name
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User Group
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User Device
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User MAC
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User Vlan
Configuring these match criteria related to user role enables an EdgeConnect to automatically assign traffic steering and firewall zone policies.
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Use the Src:Dest check box associated with several match criteria options to specify separate criteria for inbound and outbound traffic. You can configure source and destination role-based policies when both source and destination users are in the same network.
Source or Destination
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An IP address can specify a subnet; for example, 10.10.10.0/24 (IPv4) or fe80::204:23ff:fed8:4ba2/64 (IPv6).
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To allow any IP address, use 0.0.0.0/0 (IPv4) or ::/0 (IPv6).
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Ports are available only for the protocols tcp, udp, and tcp/udp.
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To allow any port, use 0.
Wildcard-based Prefix Matching Rules
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Even when using a range or a wildcard, the IPv4 address must be specified in the 4-octet format, separated by the dot notation. For example, A.B.C.D.
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Range is specified using a single dash. For example, 128-129.
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Wildcard is specified as an asterisk (*).
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Range and Wildcard can both be used in the same address, but an octet can only contain one or the other. For example, 10.136-137.*.64-95.
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A wildcard can only be used to define an entire octet. For example, 10.13*.*.64-95 is not supported. Use 10.130-139.*.64-95 to specify this range.
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The same rules apply to IPv6 addressing.
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CIDR notation and (Range or Wildcard) are mutually exclusive in the same address. For example, 192.168.0.1-127/24 is not supported. Use either 192.168.0.0/24 or 192.168.0.1-127.
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These prefix-matching rules apply to the following policies only: Route, QoS, Optimization, NAT, Security, and ACLs.