Release Note for Cisco Wide Area Application Services Software Version 6.4.3x
Cisco Software Version 6.4.3x New and Changed Features
Cisco Software Version 6.4.3f New and Changed Features
Cisco Software Version 6.4.3e New and Changed Features
Cisco Software Version 6.4.3d New and Changed Features
Cisco Software Version 6.4.3c New and Changed Features
Cisco Software Version 6.4.3b New and Changed Features
Cisco Software Version 6.4.3a New and Changed Features
Cisco Software Version 6.4.3 New and Changed Features
Cisco Software Version 6.4.3x Filenames
Cisco WAAS Standard Image Files
No Payload Encryption Image Files
Hypervisor-wise Unified OVA Package Format for Cisco vWAAS in Cisco WAAS Version 6.4.3x
Cisco WAAS Appliance System Firmware Update
RAID Controller Firmware Update
Hardware, Client, and Web Browser Support
Platforms Supported by Cisco WAAS
Hypervisors Supported by Cisco vWAAS
Browsers Supported by Cisco WAAS
Cisco WAAS Version Interoperability
Cisco WAAS and Cisco vWAAS Interoperability
Cisco ISR-WAAS Models and Supported Cisco ISR Platforms
Cisco vWAAS Resizing in Cisco WAAS Version 6.4.1 and Later
Guidelines for Using Cisco vWAAS with Cisco WAAS
Cisco WAAS, ISR and IOS-XE Interoperability
Cisco WAAS, ISR and IOS-XE Interoperability
Operating Guidelines for Cisco WAAS, ISR and IOS-XE Interoperability
Cisco AppNav and AppNav-XE Interoperability
Cisco WAAS, ASR/CSR and IOS-XE Interoperability
Traffic Interception Interoperability
General Traffic Interception Interoperability
WCCP Interception Interoperability
Cisco WAAS Application Accelerators Interoperability with Third-Party Load Balancers
Cipher Support for SSL Acceleration
Upgrading from a Release Version to Cisco WAAS Version 6.4.3x
Guidelines for Upgrading from a Release Version to Cisco WAAS Version 6.4.3x
Upgrade Paths and Considerations for Cisco WAAS Version 6.4.3x
Upgrade Paths for Cisco WAAS Version 6.4.3x
Upgrading from Cisco WAAS Version 5.x and Later to Cisco WAAS Version 6.4.3x
Upgrading from Cisco WAAS Version 4.2.x to Cisco WAAS Version 6.4.3x
Workflow: Upgrading from a Release Version to Cisco WAAS Version 6.4.3x
Upgrade Part 1: Create a Backup of the Primary Cisco WAAS Central Manager Database
Upgrade Part 2: Upgrade the Standby Cisco WAAS Central Manager
Upgrade Part 3: Upgrade the Primary Cisco WAAS Central Manager
Upgrade Part 4: Upgrade the Branch Cisco WAE Devices
Upgrade Part 5: Pre-Upgrade Task for the Data Center Cisco WAAS Software
Upgrade Part 6: Upgrade Each Data Center Cisco WAE
Upgrade Part 7: WCCP and Migration Processes
Upgrade Part 8: Post-Upgrade Tasks
Migrating a Cisco WAAS Central Manager from an Unsupported to a Supported Platform
Migrating a Physical Appliance Being Used as a Primary Cisco WAAS Central Manager to a Cisco vCM
Ensuring a Successful RAID Pair Rebuild
Downgrading from Cisco WAAS Version 6.4.3x to a Previous Version
Downgrading the Cisco WAAS System from Cisco WAAS Version 6.4.3x to a Previous Version
Downgrade Component and Data Considerations
Downgrading the Cisco WAAS Central Manager from Cisco WAAS Version 6.4.3x to an Earlier Version
Cisco WAAS Central Manager Downgrade Path Considerations
Cisco WAAS Central Mangaer Downgrade Procedure Considerations
Procedure for Downgrading the Cisco WAAS Central Manager to a Previous Version
Cisco WAE and Cisco WAVE Appliance Boot Process
Report Scheduling and Policy Changes
CIFS Support of FAT32 File Servers
Using the HTTP Accelerator with the Cisco ASR 1000 Series Router and WCCP
Cisco Software Version 6.4.3x Command Changes
Cisco Software Version 6.4.3x Resolved and Open Caveats
Cisco Software Version 6.4.3f Resolved Caveats
Cisco Software Version 6.4.3f Open Caveats
Cisco Software Version 6.4.3e Resolved Caveats
Cisco Software Version 6.4.3e Open Caveats
Cisco Software Version 6.4.3d Resolved Caveats
Cisco Software Version 6.4.3d Open Caveats
Cisco Software Version 6.4.3c Resolved Caveats
Cisco Software Version 6.4.3c Open Caveats
Cisco Software Version 6.4.3b Resolved Caveats
Cisco Software Version 6.4.3b Open Caveats
Cisco Software Version 6.4.3a Resolved Caveats
Cisco Software Version 6.4.3a Open Caveats
Cisco Software Version 6.4.3 Resolved Caveats
Cisco Software Version 6.4.3 Open Caveats
Obtaining Documentation and Submitting a Service Request
Note The documentation set for this product strives to use bias-free language. For purposes of this documentation set, bias-free is defined as language that does not imply discrimination based on age, disability, gender, racial identity, ethnic identity, sexual orientation, socioeconomic status, and intersectionality. Exceptions may be present in the documentation due to language that is hardcoded in the user interfaces of the product software, language used based on RFP documentation, or language that is used by a referenced third-party product.
Note The most current Cisco documentation for released products is available on Cisco.com.
This Release Note applies to the following software versions for the Cisco Wide Area Application Services (WAAS) software:
For information on Cisco WAAS features and commands, see the Cisco WAAS documentation located at http://www.cisco.com/en/US/products/ps6870/tsd_products_support_series_home.html.
This Release Note contains the following sections:
This section has the following topics:
No new features were added in this release. A few commands have been modified that are documented in Cisco WAAS CLI Commands Added or Modified in Cisco WAAS Version 6.4.3f and the resolved caveats are listed in the Cisco Software Version 6.4.3f Resolved Caveats, below.
– default administrator account for Cisco WAAS Central Manager and Cisco WAAS CLI on Cisco WAAS devices.
– default NFVIS administrator account for Cisco Enterprise Network Compute System 5400-W Series (Cisco ENCS 5400-W Series) appliances.
– default NFVIS administrator account for Cisco Cloud Services Platform 5000-W Series (Cisco CSP 5000-W Series) appliances.
– Shared LOM works with the Standby interface in Cisco WAAS, but does not work with the Port-channel interface in Cisco WAAS.
– Shared LOM support is available for vWAAS on the ENCS 5400-W series. For more information, see the chapter “Cisco vWAAS on Cisco ENCS 5400-W Series” in the Cisco Virtual Wide Area Application Services Installation and Configuration Guide.
– RHEL Server 7.5 and RHEL Server 7.6
– CentOS Linux 7.5.1804 (Core) and CentOS Linux 7.6.1810 (Core)
For a list of CLI commands added or changed for Cisco WAAS Version 6.4.3b, see Cisco Software Version 6.4.3x Command Changes.
There are three CSP 5000-W models:
– CSP 5228-W (12,000 connections): for vWAAS-12000
– CSP 5228-W (50,000 connections): for vWAAS-50000
– CSP 5436-W (150,000 connections): for vWAAS-150000
– Alarm details are displayed in the WAAS Central Manager device dashboard page.
– Alarm sorting is available based on the alarm time raised in the Alerts page.
Cisco WAAS Software Version 6.4.3 includes the following WAAS new and changed features:
– Ability to configure DSCP Remarking of LAN and WAN values.
– Ability to configure multiple accelerated services to use any server for SSL acceleration.
– New SaaS optimization and reporting- Support for acceleration of ServiceNow and Salesforce.
For a list of CLI commands added or modified changed for WAAS Version 6.4.3, see Cisco Software Version 6.4.3x Command Changes.
Cisco vWAAS in Cisco WAAS Version 6.4.3 includes the following vWAAS new and changed features:
Cisco vWAAS with SR-IOV on VMware ESXi is supported for vWAAS 150000.
This expands SR-IOV support for vWAAS: vWAAS for WAAS 6.4.1 supports vWAAS with SR-IOV on RHEL KVM for the following models only:
This section describes the Cisco WAAS Software Version 6.4.3x software image files for use on Cisco WAAS appliances and modules and contains the following topics:
Cisco WAAS Software Version 6.4.3x includes the following standard primary software image files for use on Cisco WAAS appliances and modules:
The following additional files are also included:
Cisco WAAS Software Version 6.4.3x includes No Payload Encryption (NPE) primary software image files that have the disk encryption feature disabled. These images are suitable for use in countries where disk encryption is not permitted. NPE primary software image files include the following:
The following additional files are also included:
Each unified OVA package file provides an option to choose a Cisco vWAAS or Cisco vCM model and other required parameters to launch Cisco vWAAS or Cisco vCM in Cisco WAAS in the required configuration.
Table 1 shows the unified OVA filename formats supported for hypervisors, appliances, Cisco vWAAS models, and Cisco vCM models.
Note On VMware ESXi, the OVA deployment for Cisco WAAS Version 6.4.1 and later must be done only through VMware vCenter. For more information on deployment, see Cisco Virtual Wide Area Application Services Installation and Configuration Guide.
For a listing of current hypervisor-wise NPE and non-NPE OVA files for Cisco vWAAS or Cisco vCM, see the Cisco Wide Area Application Services (WAAS) Download Software Page and select the WAAS software version for your Cisco vWAAS instance.
Table 1 Cisco Unified OVA Filename Format Supported for Hypervisors, Appliances, vWAAS and vCM Models
On Cisco Wide Area Application Engine (WAE) and Cisco Wide Area Application Virtualization Engine (WAVE) appliances, we recommend that you update the following three types of system firmware to the latest version to best support new Cisco WAAS features.
This section contains the following topics:
The latest BIOS is required for AppNav operation with a Cisco AppNav Controller Interface Module in WAVE-594/694/7541/7571/8541 models. WAVE-294 models may also need a BIOS update.
For the specific BIOS version required for WAVE-594/694 models, WAVE-7541/7571/8541 models, and WAVE-294 models, please see the Cisco Wide Area Application Service (WAAS) Firmware download page ( registered customers only).
If you install a Cisco AppNav Controller Interface Module in a device that requires a BIOS update, the bios_support_seiom major alarm is raised, “I/O module may not get the best I/O performance with the installed version of the system BIOS firmware.”
To determine if a device has the correct BIOS version, use the show hardware command. The last three characters of the Version value, for example, “20a,” show the BIOS version installed on the device.
If a BIOS firmware update is needed, you can download it from cisco.com at the Cisco Wide Area Application Service (WAAS) Firmware download page ( registered customers only). The firmware binary image for WAVE-294/594/694/7541/7571/8541 appliances is named waas-bios-installer-20a-19a-13a-k9.bin.
You can use the following command to update the BIOS from the image file that is available through FTP on your network:
copy ftp install ip-address remotefiledir waas-bios-installer-20a-19a-13a-k9.bin
Use the appropriate BIOS installer file for your appliance model.
The complete update process can take several minutes and the device may appear unresponsive but do not interrupt the process or power cycle the device. After the update is complete, you must reload the device.
After the device reboots, you can verify the firmware version by using the show hardware command.
IPMI over LAN requires that you install a specific BMC firmware version on the device. The minimum supported BMC firmware versions are as follows:
Cisco WAAS appliances shipped from the factory with Cisco WAAS Version 4.4.5 or later have the correct firmware installed. If you are updating a device that was shipped with an earlier version of Cisco WAAS software, you must update the BMC firmware, unless it was updated previously.
To determine if you are running the correct firmware version, use the show bmc info command. The following example displays the latest BMC firmware version installed on the device (49a here):
If a BMC firmware update is needed, you can download it from the Cisco Wide Area Application Service (WAAS) Firmware download page ( registered customers only). For example, if the firmware binary image is named waas-bmc-installer-49a-49a-27a-k9.bin, you can use the following command to update the firmware from the image file that is available through FTP on your network:
copy ftp install ip-address remotefiledir waas-bmc-installer-49a-49a-27a-k9.bin
The update process automatically checks the health status of the BMC firmware. If the system detects that the BMC firmware is corrupted, BMC is recovered during the BMC firmware update procedure. The complete update process can take several minutes. If the device appears unresponsive, do not interrupt the process or power cycle the device. After the update is complete, you must reload the device.
After the device reboots, you can verify the firmware version by using the show bmc info command.
BMC recovery and BMC firmware update restores the factory defaults on the BMC and all the current IPMI over LAN configurations are erased.
If the BMC firmware gets corrupted, a critical alarm is raised.
We recommend that you upgrade to the latest RAID-5 controller firmware for your hardware platform, which can be found on the Cisco Wide Area Application Service (WAAS) Firmware download page (registered customers only). The firmware differs depending on your hardware platform:
The firmware binary image is named waas-raid-fw-installer-12.12.0-0060-k9.bin. Instructions on how to apply the firmware update are posted on cisco.com together with the firmware in the file named M2_0060_FIRMWARE.pdf, which you can see when you mouse over the firmware file.
This section contains the following topics:
Table 2 shows the operating systems and supported hypervisors, hardware platforms, and Cisco vCM and vWAAS models.
Note You must deploy the Cisco WAAS Central Manager on a dedicated device.
Table 2 Operating Systems and Supported Hypervisors, Platforms, vCM and vWAAS Models
Windows Server 2012R2 Standard - Microsoft System Center 2012 R2 - Version 3.2.7510.0 |
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vWAAS models that are supported on Microsoft Hyper-V: vWAAS-200, 750, 1300, 2500, 6000, 12000 |
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For more information, see Cisco Virtual Wide Area Application Services Installation and Configuration Guide.
The Cisco WAAS Central Manager GUI requires Internet Explorer Version 11, Windows Version 7 or later, Firefox Version 4 or later, Chrome Version 10 or later, or Safari version 5.x (only on Apple OS X) and the Adobe Flash Player browser plug-in.
Note For best results for Windows-based systems with Cisco WAAS, we recommend using FireFox as your browser.
Note A known issue in Chrome Version 44.0 may prevent some WAAS Central Manager pages, including Device Listing, Reports, and Software Update pages, from loading properly. In all other Chrome versions, earlier and later than Chrome Version 44.0, all WAAS Central Manager pages work as expected.
Consider the following guidelines when operating a Cisco WAAS network that mixes Software Version 6.4.3x devices with devices running earlier software versions:
In a mixed version Cisco WAAS network, the Cisco WAAS Central Manager must be running the latest version of the Cisco WAAS software (6.4.3x), and associated Cisco WAAS devices must be running Cisco WAAS Version 5.1.x- 5.5.7xor later.
Cisco WAAS Version 6.4.3x is not supported running in a mixed version Cisco WAAS network in which any Cisco WAAS device is running a software version earlier than Version 5.1.x. Directly upgrading a device from a version earlier than Cisco WAAS version 5.5.3 to 6.4.3 is not supported.
Table 3 ISR-WAAS Models: CPUs, Memory, Disk Storage and Supported ISR Platforms
Operating guidelines for Cisco ISR-WAAS:
– For ISR-WAAS-200 in ISR-4321 with IOS-XE 16.x, 4 GB of memory is mandatory.
– For ISR-WAAS-200 in ISR-4321 with IOX-XE 3.x, 3 GB of memory is recommended; 4 GB of memory is optional.
Cisco vWAAS in Cisco WAAS Version 6.4.1x and later requires additional resources, so we highly recommend that you resize CPU and memory resources, as shown in Table 4. Resizing Cisco vWAAS on the recommended platforms enables Cisco vWAAS to scale to optimized TCP connections for the associated device, and to optimize CPU and RAM utilization.
Note Cisco ISR-WAAS and Cisco vCM are not resized for Cisco vWAAS in Cisco WAAS Version 6.4.1a and later.
Note For optimum performance, we recommend you use the SSD disk with the Cisco UCS models listed in Table 4.
Table 4 Resized vWAAS CPU and Memory Specifications for WAAS Version 6.4.1a and Later
– Upgrade to the latest Cisco UCS-E firmware, available on the Cisco Download Software Page for UCS E-Series Software, UCS E160S M3 Software.
– Verify that you have installed the critical Windows Server updates, available on the Microsoft Windows RT 8.1, Windows 8.1, and Windows Server 2012 R2 Update Rollup page. You can also obtain the standalone update package through the Microsoft Download Center by searching for KB2887595.
Note When upgrading Cisco vWAAS, upgrade one Cisco vWAAS node at a time in any Cisco UCS device. Considering the resized options selection, ensure that there is enough available disk space, before and after the upgrade. Upgrades done without sufficient space makes the Cisco vWAAS device go offline and in diskless mode.
If needed, change the SCSI controller type to VMware Paravirtual by following these steps:
a. Power down the Cisco vWAAS.
b. From the VMware vCenter, navigate to vSphere Client > Edit Settings > Hardware.
d. From the Change Type drop-down list, verify that the SCSI Controller Type is set to VMware Paravirtual. If this is not the case, choose VMware Paravirtual.
f. Power up the Cisco vWAAS, in Cisco WAAS Version 6.1.x or later.
For more information on setting the SCSI Controller Type and on the Cisco vWAAS VM installation procedure, see the Cisco Virtual Wide Area Application Services Installation and Configuration Guide.
Note If the Cisco vWAAS device is downgraded in the following scenarios:
—from Cisco vWAAS in Cisco WAAS Version 6.4.3x to Cisco WAAS Version 6.2.3x, or
—from vWAAS in Cisco WAAS Version 6.x to 5.x
the Cisco WAAS alarm filesystem_size_mismatch is displayed; it indicates that the partition was not created as expected. To clear the alarm, use the disk delete-data-partitions command to re-create the DRE partitions.
Table 5 Cisco WAAS, ISR and IOS-XE Interoperability
* In the table column Cisco IOS-XE Version Supported, this is the recommended release version.
Note ISR Platforms running software version 17.4 or later do not support the WAAS software. We recommend that you use IOS version 17.3 or earlier if you want to continue using the WAAS software.
After you format the Cisco 4000 Series ISR-router bootflash, you must reload the router to ensure a successful activation of Cisco ISR-WAAS. If you do not reload the Cisco ISR router after formatting the bootflash, you will be unable to activate Cisco ISR-WAAS. For more information on formatting the Cisco 4000 Series ISR router bootflash, see the Configuration Guide for Integrated AppNav/AppNav-XE and ISR-WAAS on Cisco 4000 Series ISRs.
To ensure a successful Cisco WAAS installation of Cisco ISR-WAAS and Snort on a Cisco ISR router, you must install Cisco ISR-WAAS before you install Snort. If you do not follow this installation order, Cisco ISR-WAAS will not install and a disk error will be displayed.
When you configure Cisco ISR-WAAS with EZConfig: VirtualPortGroup31, the Cisco WAAS service/router interface, is automatically created, and you can then add or modify specific parameters for it.
Note Do not add Virtual Routing and Forwarding (VRF) to VirtualPortGroup31. VRF will cause VirtualPortGroup31 to lose its IP address and will disable AppNav. To re-establish these, you must uninstall and reinstall Cisco ISR-WAAS without VRF.
For more information on VirtualPortGroup31, see the Configuration Guide for Integrated AppNav/AppNav-XE and ISR-WAAS on Cisco 4000 Series ISRs.
Note Cisco IOS-XE 3.14 should not be used for Cisco ISR-WAAS.
Consider the following guidelines when deploying the Cisco AppNav solution, for AppNav and AppNav-XE.
Note AppNav Controller functionality is available for Cisco WAAS Version 6.4.1 and later. However, configuration of the AppNav Controller function and Cisco WAAS node function on the same device is not supported.
Note Cisco WAAS Version 6.4.1 and later supports Cisco AppNav IOM.
– All Cisco ASRs (Aggregation Services Routers) in an AppNav Controller Group need to be the same model, with the same ESP (Embedded Services Processor) rate (in Gbps). For example, in an AppNav Controller Group, you cannot have one ASR-1006 40-Gbps ESP and one ASR-1006 100-Gbps ESP.
– The same principle is true for using the Cisco Cloud Services Router (Cisco CSR) 1000V Series or the Cisco Integrated Services Router (Cisco ISR) 4000 series. For example, you cannot have a Cisco ISR-4451 and a Cisco ISR-4321 in the same AppNav-XE cluster.
Note Although a Cisco IOS router can have a dot (“.”) in the hostname, this special character is not allowed in a Cisco WAAS device hostname. If you try to import an AppNav-XE device that has a dot in the hostname, the import will fail and the following error message is displayed:
Registration failed for the device devicename ConstraintException; Invalid AppNav-XE name: X.X since name includes invalid character ‘.’.
Table 6 Cisco WAAS, ASR/CSR, and IOS-XE Interoperability
Cisco WAAS uses the following traffic interception methods: Web Cache Communications Protocol (WCCP), WCCP Version 2, AppNav, Inline, Policy-Based Routing (PBR) and ITD (advanced version of PBR) and Catena. For Cisco WAAS Version 5.5.1 and earlier, Cisco WAAS supports WCCP, AppNav, and vPATH.
Consider the following guidelines when configuring traffic interception for Cisco WAAS.
– port 80: Communicates with the distribution point. Configure for pass-through traffic.
– port 443: Communicates with the distribution point. Configure for pass-through traffic.
– port 445: Used for software package distribution data transfer. Configure for traffic optimization.
Without these configurations you may see the error message PXE error code 80070056.
For more information on traffic interception methods, see the “Configuring Traffic Interception” chapter of the Cisco Wide Area Application Services Configuration Guide.
Cisco WAAS Central Managers running Cisco WAAS Version 6.4.3 and later can manage WAEs running Cisco WAAS Software Version 5.x and later. However, we recommend that all WAEs in a given WCCP service group be running the same version.
Note All WAEs in a WCCP service group must have the same mask.
To upgrade the WAEs in your WCCP service group, follow these steps:
Step 1 You must disable WCCP redirection on the Cisco IOS router first. To remove the global WCCP configuration, use the following no ip wccp global configuration commands:
Step 2 To perform the Cisco WAAS software upgrade on all WAEs, use the Cisco WAAS Central Manager GUI.
Step 3 Verify that all WAEs have been upgraded in the Devices pane of the Cisco WAAS Central Manager GUI. To view the software version of each WAE, choose Devices.
Step 4 If mask assignment is used for WCCP, ensure that all WAEs in the service group are using the same WCCP mask value.
Step 5 Reenable WCCP redirection on the Cisco IOS routers. To enable WCCP redirection, use the ip wccp global configuration commands:
Consider the following guidelines for Citrix ICA interoperability:
– Legacy Graphic Mode: Enabled
– NetScaler VPX 12.1.51.19 (HDX insight 12.1.50.43), DDC 7.18 VDA 7.18 (Windows Server 2k16), Windows Client 2007, 2010, Citrix Receiver 14.1,14.5,14.9,14.12.
– XenApp & Desktop DDC 7.18, VDA 7.18 (Windows server 2k16), Windows Client 2007, 2010, Citrix Receiver 14.1,14.5,14.9,14.12.
– XenApp & Desktop DDC 7.15.300LTSR, VDA 7.15.300LTSR (Windows server 2k16), Windows Client 2007, 2010, Citrix Receiver 14.1,14.5,14.9,14.12.
– XenApp & Desktop DDC 7.6, VDA 7.6 (Windows server 2k12r2), Windows Client 2007, 2010, Citrix Receiver 14.1,14.5,14.9,14.12.
– XenApp & Desktop 6.5 (Windows server 2008r2), Windows Client 2007, 2010, Citrix Receiver 14.1,14.5,14.9,14.12.
A load balancer is used to balance network and application traffic across a set of servers, The resulting evenly-distributed traffic improves the response rate of network traffic, increases the availability of applications, and minimizes the risk of a single server becoming overloaded.
Step 6 Table 7 shows the interoperability between Cisco WAAS application accelerators and the F5 load balancer. For more information about Cisco WAAS load balancing, see the sections “About Traffic Interception Methods” and “Configuring Policy-Based Routing” in the Cisco Wide Area Application Services Configuration Guide, and see the Server Load-Balancing Guide vA5(1.0), Cisco ACE Application Control Engine.
Table 7 Cisco WAAS Application Accelerators Interoperability with Load Balancers
No new cipher support is available for SSL Acceleration (Legacy SSL Acceleration) other than those listed in “Configuring SSL Management Services” of the Cisco Wide Area Application Services Configuration Guide. For additional ciphers supported, please see the supported cipher list for SMART-SSL Acceleration.
This section contains the following topics:
For additional upgrade information and detailed procedures, see the Cisco Wide Area Application Services Upgrade Guide.
Consider these guidelines to upgrade from a release version to Cisco WAAS Version 6.4.3x:
Note When you perform a software upgrade via the Cisco WAAS Central Manager, there is only a limited system check to verify the support of the target Cisco WAAS version. To ensure that you have a successful Cisco WAAS upgrade, use Table 8, “Upgrade Paths to Cisco WAAS Version 6.4.3,”to verify that the target version is supported for your system.
Upgrading to WAAS Version 6.4.3x is supported from WAAS Version 4.2.x and later. Table 8 shows the upgrade path for each of these versions.
Note When you perform a software upgrade via the WAAS Central Manager, there is only a limited system check to verify the support of the target WAAS version. To ensure that you have a successful WAAS upgrade, use Table 8, to verify that the target version is supported for your system.
Cisco WAAS Version 5.1 and later do not support NTLM Windows domain authentication or use of a nonstandard port (other than port 88) for Kerberos authentication.
Cisco WAAS Version 5.2 and later restrict the characters used in usernames to letters, numbers, period, hyphen, underscore, and @ sign, and a username must start with a letter or number.
Any username not meeting these guidelines is prevented from logging in. Prior to upgrading the Central Manager to Version 5.2 or later, we recommend that you change any such usernames to valid usernames to allow login.
For local users: Change usernames in the Cisco WAAS Central Manager Admin > AAA > Users page.
For remotely authenticated users: Change usernames on the remote authentication server.
Note Prior to upgrading the Cisco WAAS Central Manager to Version 5.2 or later, we strongly encourage you to change any usernames that use restricted characters; however if you must maintain existing usernames unchanged, please contact Cisco TAC.
Cisco WAAS Version 5.3 and later restricts the use of characters in the name and description field to alphanumeric characters, periods (.), hyphens (-), underscores (), and blank spaces when you create custom reports. When you upgrade from Cisco WAAS Version 4.x and you have custom reports that have special characters in the name or description field, Cisco WAAS automatically removes the special characters from the report name and description, and logs the modification in the Centralized Management System (CMS) logs.
– Upgrading from the Cisco WAAS Central Manager: If you initiate and complete the upgrade from the Cisco WAAS Central Manager without increasing resources for Cisco vWAAS, alarms (CPU & RAM) to indicate insufficient resource allocation will be displayed on the Cisco WAAS Central Manager after the upgrade process is completed. No alarms are displayed at the beginning of the upgrade process.
– Upgrading from the WAAS CLI: If you initiate an upgrade to Cisco WAAS 6.4.3x with the Cisco WAAS CLI, a warning on insufficient resources is displayed at the start of the upgrade process.
If you upgrade to Cisco WAAS Version 6.4.3, or downgrade from Cisco WAAS Version 6.4.3 to an earlier version, and use a Cisco vCM-100 model with the following parameters, the Cisco vCM-100 may not come up due to GUID Partition Table (GPT) boot order errors.
Note The restore factory-default command erases user-specified configuration information stored in the flash image, including the starting configuration of the device, and also removes data from the disk, user-defined partitions, and the entire Cisco WAAS Central Manager database.
To resolve this situation, follow these steps:
1. Power down the Cisco vWAAS using the virsh destroy vmname command or the virt manager.
2. Power up the Cisco vWAAS using the virsh start vmname command or the virt manager.
This upgrade/downgrade scenario does not occur for Cisco vCM-100 models whose memory size is upgraded to 4 GB.
When you upgrade from Cisco WAAS Version 4.x, you must reconfigure the custom EPM policy for a device or device group. You must first restore the default policy setting by selecting the Restore default Optimization Policies link for the device group in the Modifying Device Group window and then reconfigure your custom policy rules for the device. For more information on upgrade paths, see Table 8.
To upgrade from a Release Version to Cisco WAAS Version 6.4.3x, complete the tasks listed in Table 9.
Table 9 Workflow: Upgrading from a Release Version to Cisco WAAS Version 6.4.3x
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Note the following different CMS database backup scenarios, depending on the size of /sw and /swstore:
Before upgrading to Cisco WAAS Version 6.4.3x, follow these steps to create a backup of the Cisco WAAS Central Manager database:
Step 1 Use Telnet or SSH to access the primary Cisco WAAS Central Manager IP address.
Step 2 Create the database backup, using the cms database backup command:
Step 3 The cms database backup command displays the following information:
creating backup file with label ‘backup’
backup file local1/filename filedate.dump is ready. use ‘copy’ command to move the backup file to a remote host.
Step 4 Copy the backup database file to a remote location, using the copy disk command:
waas-cm# copy disk ftp hostname ip-address remotefiledir remotefilename localfilename
Step 5 Verify that the backup file was copied correctly by verifying file size and time stamp.
Follow these steps to upgrade the standby Cisco WAAS Central Manager, if present in your Cisco WAAS system.
Step 1 Use Telnet or SSH to access the standby Cisco WAAS Central Manager IP address:
Step 2 Copy the new software image to the standby Cisco WAAS Central Manager with the copy ftp command.
The following example shows the file in the root directory. Provide the correct path on your Cisco WAAS system, if different from the root directoy path.
wae# copy ftp install ftpserver / waas-image.bin
Step 3 Reload the standby Cisco WAAS Central Manager using the reload command
Step 4 Verify that the new image is loaded correctly, using the show version command.
Step 5 To confirm connectivity, ping the primary Cisco WAAS Central Manager and branch Cisco WAE devices.
Step 6 Wait at least five minutes.
Step 7 To ensure that the database has been synchronized, confirm the database last synchronization time, using the show cms info command.
Step 8 From the primary Cisco WAAS Central Manager, confirm that the status indicator for the standby Cisco WAAS Central Manager is online and green.
Perform the following tasks before you upgrade the primary Cisco WAAS Central Manager:
Follow these steps to upgrade the primary Cisco WAAS Central Manager.
Step 1 Use Telnet or SSH to access the primary Cisco WAAS Central Manager IP address:
Step 2 Copy the new software image to the primary Cisco WAAS Central Manager, either from the Cisco WAAS Central Manager or the Cisco WAAS CLI.
From the Cisco WAAS Central Manager:
a. In the Standby Cisco WAAS Central Manager, navigate to Admin > Versioning > Software Update.
b. From the Software Files listing, select the new software version.
The following example shows the file in the root directory. Provide the correct path on your Cisco WAAS system, if different from the root directoy path.
wae# copy ftp install ftpserver / waas-image.bin
Step 3 Copy the new Cisco WAAS Version 6.4.3 software image to the primary Cisco WAAS Central Manager, using the copy ftp command:
wae# copy ftp install ftpserver / waas-image.bin
Note This example shows the file in the root directory. Provide the correct path on your Cisco WAAS system, if different from the root directory path.
Step 4 Reload the primary Cisco WAAS Central Manager, using the reload command
Step 5 Verify that the new Cisco WAAS Version 6.4.3x image is loaded correctly, using the show version command.
Step 6 To confirm connectivity, ping the standby Cisco WAAS Central Manager (if present in your Cisco WAAS system) and branch Cisco WAE devices.
Step 7 Confirm that the CMS services are running, using the show cms info command.
Step 8 Choose Devices > All Devices and verify that all Cisco WAE devices are online.
Step 9 Choose Device Groups > AllWAASGroups > Assign Devices and verify that each Cisco WAE device is listed with a green check mark.
Before you upgrade the branch Cisco WAE devices, verify that you have completed the following tasks:
Follow these steps to upgrade the branch Cisco WAE devices.
Step 1 Access the primary Cisco WAAS Central Manager GUI:
Step 2 Verify that all Cisco WAE devices are online (displaying green).
Step 3 Resolve any alarm conditions that may exist.
Step 4 Copy the new software image to the branch Cisco WAE, either from the Cisco WAAS Central Manager or the CLI.
From the Cisco WAAS Central Manager:
a. In the branch Cisco WAE, navigate to Admin > Versioning > Software Update.
b. From the Software Files listing, select the new software version.
a. Use the copy ftp command. You can use either Universal or Accelerator-only images.
The following example shows the file in the root directory. Provide the correct path on your Cisco WAAS system, if different from the root directoy path.
wae# copy ftp install ftpserver / waas-image.bin
Step 5 Reload the Cisco WAE using the reload command.
Step 6 Verify that the new Cisco WAAS Version 6.4.3x software image has installed correctly, using the show version command.
Step 7 Verify that the correct licenses are installed, using the show license command.
Step 8 If you have purchased an Enterprise license and have enabled it, proceed to Step 10.
If you have purchased an Enterprise license and have not yet enabled it, perform the following tasks:
a. Clear the Enterprise license, using the clear license transport command.
b. Add the Enterprise license, using the license add enterprise command.
Step 9 Save the changed configuration, using the copy running-config startup-config command.
Step 10 From the primary Cisco WAAS Central Manager, choose Devices > branchWAE, to verify that the Cisco WAE device is online and has a green status.
Step 11 Verify the following Cisco WAE device functionalities:
a. If you are using WCCP for traffic interception, verify that WCCP is working properly, using the show running -config wccp command.
b. (Optional) Confirm that flows are being optimized, using the show statistics connection command.
c. Confirm that the Enterprise license is enabled, using the show license command.
If you have purchased the Enterprise license and it is enabled, proceed to Step 12.
If you have purchased an Enterprise license and have not yet enabled it, perform the following tasks:
1. Clear the Transport license, using the clear license transport command.
2. Add the Enterprise license, using the license add enterprise command.
3. Save the changed configuration, using the copy running-config startup-config command.
Step 12 The branch Cisco WAE devices within the active Cisco WAAS network are now upgraded to the current Cisco WAAS Version 6.4.3x.
Follow these steps to upgrade the data center Cisco WAAS software.
Step 1 Access the primary Cisco WAAS Central Manager GUI:
Step 2 Verify that all Cisco WAE devices are online (displaying green).
Step 3 Resolve any alarm conditions that may exist.
Step 4 Upgrade each data center Cisco WAE (Upgrade Part 6: Upgrade Each Data Center Cisco WAE).
Note For deployments using WCCP as the traffic interception method, each data center Cisco WAE is automatically removed from the interception path. If your deployment does not use WCCP, use one of the following methods to remove each data center Cisco WAE from the interception path during the upgrade process:
For an inline deployment: Use the interface InlineGroup slot/grpnumber shutdown global configuration command to bypass traffic on the active inline groups.
For a deployment using serial inline cluster: Shut down the interfaces on the intermediate Cisco WAE in the cluster, then shut down the interfaces on the optimizing Cisco WAE in the cluster.
Follow these steps to upgrade each data center WAE.
Step 1 Use the following sequence of commands to disable WCCP on the Cisco WAE and allow a graceful termination of existing TCP flows that are optimized by Cisco WAAS:
a. Disable WCCP with the no wccp tcp-promiscuous service-pair serviceID serviceID global configuration command.
b. Wait until the countdown expires, or use CTL-C to skip the countdown.
c. Verify that WCCP is disabled, using the show wccp status command.
d. Save the changed configuration, using the copy running-config startup-config command.
Step 2 (Optional) Disable WCCP on the intercepting router or switch, using the no ip wccp global configuration command.
Note We recommend this step only if the Cisco IOS release on the router or switch has not been scrubbed for WCCP issues for your specific platform.
Step 3 (Optional) Verify that WCCP is disabled, using the show ip wccp command, if you have used Step 2.
Step 4 Upgrade the data center Cisco WAE software:
Step 5 Copy the new software image to the data center WAE, either from the Cisco WAAS Central Manager or the CLI.
From the Cisco WAAS Central Manager:
a. In the data center Cisco WAE, navigate to Admin > Versioning > Software Update.
b. From the Software Files listing, select the new software version.
a. Use the copy ftp command. You can use either Universal or Accelerator-only images.
The following example shows the file in the root directory. Provide the correct path on your WAAS system, if different from the root directoy path.
wae# copy ftp install ftpserver / waas-image.bin
Step 6 Reload the Cisco WAE using the reload command.
Step 7 Verify that the new Cisco WAAS Version 6.4.3x software image has installed correctly, using the show version command.
Step 8 Verify that WCCP is disabled, using the show wccp status command.
Step 9 Save the changed configuration, using the copy running-config startup-config command.
Step 10 From the primary Cisco WAAS Central Manager, choose Devices > branchWAE, to verify that the Cisco WAE device is online and has a green status.
Step 11 (Optional) Enable WCCP on all intercepting routers or switches in the list, if you have used Step 2.
a. Telnet to each core router or switch.
b. Enable WCCP, using the ip wccp 61 redirect-list acl-name command and the ip wccp 62 redirect-list acl-name command.
Step 12 Verify the following Cisco WAE device functionalities:
a. Enable WCCP, using the wccp tcp-promiscuous service-pair serviceID serviceID global configuration command. If you are using WCCP single-service, use the wccp tcp-promiscuous serviceID global configuration command.
b. Verify that redirecting router IDs are seen, using the show wccp routers command.
c. Verify that all Cisco WAEs in the cluster are seen, using the show wccp clients command.
d. Verify that the packet count to the WAE is increasing and no loops are detected, using the show wccp statistics command.
e. Verify that the buckets assigned for Service Group 61 match those of Service Group 62, and are assigned to the WAE, using the show wccp flows tcp-promiscuous detail command.
f. Verify that flows are being optimized, using the show statistics connection command.
g. If you are using WCCP for traffic interception, verify that WCCP is working properly, using the show running -config wccp command.
Step 13 Each data center Cisco WAE within the active Cisco WAAS network is now upgraded to the current Cisco WAAS Version 6.4.3x.
For information on the sets of tasks to enable and reconfigure WCCP, and information on configuring accelerators, switches and routers for migration, see the Cisco Wide Area Application Services Upgrade Guide.
Perform the following tasks after you have completed the upgrade to Cisco WAAS Version 6.4.3x:
If you have a Cisco WAAS Central Manager that is running on a hardware platform that is unsupported in Version 6.1 and later (such as a Cisco WAE-274, WAE-474, WAE-574, WAE-674, WAE-7341, or WAE-7371), you are not allowed to upgrade the device to Version 6.1 or later. You must migrate the Cisco WAAS Central Manager to a supported platform by following the procedure in this section, which preserves all of the Cisco WAAS Central Manager configuration and database information.
Follow these steps to migrate a primary Cisco WAAS Central Manager from an unsupported platform to a platform that is supported for Cisco WAAS Version 6.4.3x:
Step 1 From the primary Cisco WAAS Central Manager CLI, create a database backup by using the cms database backup EXEC command. Move the backup file to a separate device by using the copy disk ftp command.
Step 2 Display and write down the IP address and netmask of the Cisco WAAS Central Manager.
Step 3 Shut down all the interfaces on the primary Cisco WAAS Central Manager.
Step 4 Replace the existing Cisco WAAS Central Manager device with a new hardware platform that can support Cisco WAAS Version 6.1. Ensure that the new Cisco WAAS Central Manager device is running the same software version as the old Cisco WAAS Central Manager.
Step 5 Configure the new Cisco WAAS Central Manager with the same IP address and netmask as the old Cisco WAAS Central Manager. You can do this in the setup utility or by using the interface global configuration command.
Step 6 Copy the backup file created in Step 1 from the FTP server to the new Cisco WAAS Central Manager.
Step 7 Restore the database backup on the new Cisco WAAS Central Manager by using the cms database restore command. Use Option 1 to restore all CLI configurations.
Step 8 Enable the CMS service.
Step 9 Verify that the Cisco WAAS Central Manager GUI is accessible and all Cisco WAAS devices are shown in an online state in the Devices window.
Step 10 (Optional) If you have a standby Cisco WAAS Central Manager that is running on unsupported hardware and is registered to the primary Cisco WAAS Central Manager, deregister the standby Cisco WAAS Central Manager.
Step 11 Upgrade the primary Cisco WAAS Central Manager to Cisco WAAS Version 6.4.3x. You can use the Central Manager Software Update window or the copy ftp install command.
Step 12 Verify that the Cisco WAAS Central Manager GUI is accessible and all Cisco WAAS devices are shown in an online state in the Devices window.
Step 13 (Optional) Register a new standby Cisco WAAS Central Manager that is running Cisco WAAS Version 5.1.x or later.
Wait for the device to reload, change the Cisco WAAS Central Manager role to standby, and register the standby Cisco WAAS Central Manager to the primary Cisco WAAS Central Manager.
Follow these steps to migrate a physical appliance being used as a primary Cisco WAAS Central Manager to a Cisco vCM:
Step 1 Introduce Cisco vCM as the Standby Cisco WAAS Central Manager by registering it to the Primary Cisco WAAS Central Manager.
Step 2 Configure both device and device-group settings through Primary Cisco WAAS Central Manager and ensure that devices are getting updates. Wait for two to three data feed poll rate so that the Standby Cisco WAAS Central Manager gets configuration sync from the Primary Cisco WAAS Central Manager.
Step 3 Ensure that the Primary Cisco WAAS Central Manager and Standby Cisco WAAS Central Manager updates are working.
Step 4 Switch over Cisco WAAS Central Manager roles so that Cisco vCM works as Primary Cisco WAAS Central Manager. For more information, see the “Converting a Standby Central Manager to a Primary Central Manager” section of the Cisco Wide Area Application Services Configuration Guide.
RAID pairs rebuild on the next reboot after you use the restore factory-default command, replace or add a hard disk drive, delete disk partitions, or reinstall Cisco WAAS from the booted recovery CD-ROM.
To view the status of the drives and check if the RAID pairs are in NORMAL OPERATION or in REBUILDING status, use the show disk details EXEC command. When you see that RAID is rebuilding, you must let it complete that rebuild process. This rebuild process may take several hours.
If you do not wait for the RAID pairs to complete the rebuild process before you reboot the device, you may see the following symptoms that could indicate a problem:
If you encounter any of these symptoms, reboot the Cisco WAE device and wait until the RAID rebuild finishes normally.
If you have upgraded to Cisco WAAS Version 6.4.3x and are using the WSDL2Java tool to generate client stubs that enforce strict binding, earlier version client code (prior to Cisco WAAS Version 4.3.1) may return unexpected exceptions due to new elements added in the response structures in Cisco WAAS Version 4.3.1 and later releases. The observed symptom is an exception related to an unexpected subelement because of the new element (for example, a deviceName element) in the XML response.
To work around this problem, we recommend that you patch the WSDL2Java tool library to silently consume exceptions if new elements are found in XML responses and then regenerate the client stubs. This approach avoids future problems if the API is enhanced with new elements over time.
You must modify the ADBBeanTemplate.xsl file in the axis2-adb-codegen- version.jar file.
To apply the patch, follow these steps:
Step 1 List the files in the axis2-adb-codegen- version.jar file:
Step 2 Change the ADBBeanTemplate.xsl file by commenting out the following exceptions so that the generated code consumes the exceptions:
Step 3 Re-create the jar file and place it in the CLASSPATH. Delete the old jar file from the CLASSPATH.
Step 4 Use the WDL2Java tool to execute the client code using the modified jar.
This section contains the following topics:
– You cannot downgrade a Cisco vWAAS device on Cisco ENCS-W to a version earlier than WAAS Version 6.4.3, if it is connected with inline FTW card and configured with portchannel and standby or if configured with inline interception.
– You cannot downgrade a Cisco vWAAS device on Cisco ENCS-W to a version earlier than Cisco WAAS Version 6.4.1.
– The Cisco WAAS Central Manager supports upgrade and downgrade of all applicable device types in a device group.
For example, if you are downgrading a device group that has a physical Cisco WAE, a Cisco vWAAS, and appliances like the Cisco ENCS 5400-W Series or the Cisco CSP 5000-W Series to a version earlier than their respective supported version, the Cisco WAAS Central Manager will initiate the downgrade process only for the physical and virtual Cisco WAEs, but not for appliances like Cisco ENCS 5400-W Series or Cisco CSP 5000-W Series.
– If you have a standby Cisco WAAS Central Manager, it must be registered to the primary Cisco WAAS Central Manager before the downgrade.
– Prior to downgrading the Cisco WAAS Central Manager to a version up to Cisco WAAS Version 5.2.1, you must remove Backup WNG from the Cisco AppNav-XE cluster and verify that the Cisco WAAS Central Manager and Cisco AppNav-XE device are in sync.
– If the Cisco WAAS Central Manager is downgraded to a version up to Cisco WAAS Version 5.2.1 and if the Cisco AppNav-XE cluster has more than 32 Cisco WAAS nodes: Prior to downgrade, we recommend that you reduce the number of Cisco WAAS nodes to a maximum of 32 Cisco WAAS nodes.
– When downgrading Cisco WAAS devices, first downgrade application accelerator Cisco WAEs, then the standby Cisco WAAS Central Manager (if you have one), and lastly the primary Cisco WAAS Central Manager.
1. Deregister the device from the Cisco WAAS Central Manager.
2. Change the device mode to application-accelerator.
4. Re-register the device (or, alternatively, you can reregister the device before downgrading).
If you do not deregister the device before downgrading, the device goes offline and the device mode is not set correctly. In that case, use the cms deregister force EXEC command to deregister the device and then reregister it by using the cms enable global configuration command.
Note All Cisco WAAS nodes in an AppNav deployment must be running Cisco WAAS Version 5.0 or later.
To downgrade the Cisco WAAS Central Manager (not required for Cisco WAE devices), follow these steps:
Step 1 (Optional) From the Cisco WAAS Central Manager CLI, create a database backup by using the cms database backup EXEC command. Move the backup file to a separate device by using the copy disk ftp command.
Step 2 Install the downgrade Cisco WAAS software image by using the copy ftp install EXEC command.
Note After downgrading a Cisco WAAS Central Manager, you must clear your browser cache, close the browser, and restart the browser before reconnecting to the Cisco WAAS Central Manager.
Note Downgrading the database may trigger full updates for registered devices. In the Cisco WAAS Central Manager GUI, ensure that all previously operational devices come online.
To monitor the boot process on Cisco WAE and Cisco WAVE appliances, connect to the serial console port on the appliance as directed in the Hardware Installation Guide for the respective Cisco WAE and Cisco WAVE appliance.
Cisco WAE and Cisco WAVE appliances may have video connectors that should not be used in a normal operation. The video output is for troubleshooting purposes only during BIOS boot and stops displaying output as soon as the serial port becomes active.
This section contains the following operating guidelines for Cisco WAAS Version 6.4.3x:
In the Cisco WAAS Central Manager, we recommend running system wide reports in device groups of 250 devices or less, or scheduling these reports at different time intervals, so multiple system wide reports are not running simultaneously and do not reach the limit of the HTTP object cache.
Making policy changes to large numbers of Cisco WAAS Express devices from the Central Manager may take longer than making policy changes to Cisco WAAS devices.
When you create a device group in Cisco WAAS Version 6.4.3x, the Configure > Acceleration > DSCP Marking page is automatically configured for the group, with the default DSCP marking value of copy.
Autoregistration is designed to operate on the first network interface and will not work if this interface is part of a port-channel or standby. Do not enable the auto-register global configuration command when the interface is configured as part of a port-channel or standby group.
The CIFS accelerator does not support file servers that use the FAT32 file system. You can use the policy rules to exclude from acceleration any file servers that use the FAT32 file system.
When using the Cisco ASR 1000 Series router and WCCP to redirect traffic to a WAE that is using WCCP GRE return as the egress method and the HTTP accelerator is enabled, there may be an issue with HTTP slowness due to the way the ASR router handles proxied HTTP connections (see CSCtj41045). To work around this issue, on the ASR router, create a web cache service in the same VRF as that of the 61/62 service by using the following command: ip wccp [vrf vrf-name ] web-cache.
If you use the Central Manager to disable WCCP on a Cisco WAAS device, the Central Manager immediately shuts down WCCP and closes any existing connections, ignoring the setting configured by the wccp shutdown max-wait global configuration command (however, it warns you). If you want to gracefully shut down WCCP connections, use the no enable WCCP configuration command on the Cisco WAAS device.
If you change the Device mode to or from Central Manager mode, the DRE cache is erased.
If you are using TACACS+ authentication, we recommend that you do not assign any roles to the default user ID, which has no roles assigned by default. If you assign any roles to the default user, external users that are authenticated by TACACS+ and who do not have the waas_rbac_groups attribute defined in TACACS+ (meaning they are not assigned to any group) can gain access to all the roles that are assigned to the default user.
If you use Internet Explorer to access the Cisco WAAS Central Manager GUI Cisco WAAS Version 4.3.1 or later and Internet Explorer has personal certificates installed, the browser prompts you to choose a certificate from the list of those installed in the personal certificate store. The certificate request occurs to support Cisco WAAS Express registration and is ignored by Internet Explorer if no personal certificates are installed. To continue to the Cisco WAAS Central Manager login window, click OK or Cancel in the certificate dialog. To avoid this prompt, remove the installed personal certificates or use a different browser.
If a Cisco WAAS Central Manager is managing Cisco WAAS devices that have different versions, it is possible that a feature could have different default settings in those different versions. If you use the Cisco WAAS Central Manager to apply the default setting for a feature to mixed devices in a device group, the default for the Cisco WAAS Central Manager version is applied to all devices in the group.
This section lists the new and modified commands in Cisco Software Version 6.4.3x.
Table 10 Cisco WAAS CLI Commands Added or Modified in Cisco WAAS Version 6.4.3f
Table 11 Cisco WAAS CLI Commands Added or Modified in Cisco WAAS Version 6.4.3e
Enhanced to include the parameter protocol AES {128 | 192 | 256} | DES. Used to specify the encryption method and key length. |
Table 12 Cisco WAAS CLI Commands Added or Modified in Cisco WAAS Version 6.4.3b
Table 13 Cisco WAAS CLI Commands Added or Modified in Cisco WAAS Version 6.4.3
This section contains the resolved caveats, open caveats, and command changes in Cisco Software Version 6.4.3, fixed and known and contains the following topics:
The following caveats, impacting earlier software versions of Cisco WAAS, were resolved in Cisco Software Version 6.4.3f.
The following caveats are open in Cisco Software Version 6.4.3f. Note that there might be additional open caveats from previous releases that are applicable to this release, unless they are specifically listed as resolved.
The following caveats, impacting earlier software versions of Cisco WAAS, were resolved in Cisco Software Version 6.4.3e.
The following caveats are open in Cisco Software Version 6.4.3e. Note that there might be additional open caveats from previous releases that are applicable to this release, unless they are specifically listed as resolved.
The following caveats, impacting earlier software versions of Cisco WAAS, were resolved in Cisco Software Version 6.4.3d.
The following caveats are open in Cisco Software Version 6.4.3d. Note that there might be additional open caveats from previous releases that are applicable to this release, unless they are specifically listed as resolved.
The following caveats, impacting earlier software versions of Cisco WAAS, were resolved in Cisco Software Version 6.4.3c.
The following caveats are open in Cisco Software Version 6.4.3c. Note that there might be additional open caveats from previous releases that are applicable to this release, unless they are specifically listed as resolved.
The following caveats, impacting earlier software versions of Cisco WAAS, were resolved in Cisco Software Version 6.4.3b.
The following caveats, impacting earlier software versions of Cisco WAAS, were resolved in Cisco Software Version 6.4.3a.
The following caveats, impacting earlier software versions of Cisco WAAS, were resolved in Cisco Software Version 6.4.3.
In addition to this document, the WAAS documentation set includes the following publications:
For information on obtaining documentation, submitting a service request, and gathering additional information, see the monthly What’s New in Cisco Product Documentation, which also lists all new and revised Cisco technical documentation, at:
http://www.cisco.com/en/US/docs/general/whatsnew/whatsnew.html
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