Welcome to the fourth part of the NSX Federation series. In the last post, I talked about configuring local and global NSX-T managers to enable federation. In this post, I will show how we can leverage to configure stretched networking across sites.
If you have missed the earlier post of this series, you can read them using the below links:
1: NSX-T Federation-Introduction & Architecture
NSX-T Federation Topology
Before diving into the lab, I want to do a quick recap of the lab topology that I will be building in this post.
The following components in my lab are already built out :
1: Cross Link Router: This router is responsible for facilitating communication between Site-A & Site-B SDDC/NSX.
- Site-A ToR01/02 are forming BGP neighborship with Cross Link Router and advertising necessary subnets to enable inter-site communication.
- Site-B ToR01/02 are also BGP peering with the Cross Link Router and advertising subnets.