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What does a disabled VDOM mean in Practice
Hi all,
Experimenting with vdoms i disabled a vdom and expect the same behavior as if i pull the plug out of the virtual device. All interfaces are disabled, no service is responding on any interface belonging to that particular vdom. But in reality it seems as if the services are not affected by that administrative step. The only information to find in the www is the well known paragraph which is not changed much over a decade:
Disabled status VDOMs are considered “offline”. The configuration remains, but you cannot use the VDOM, and only the super_admin administrator can view it. You cannot delete a disabled VDOM without first enabling it, and removing references to it like usual— there is no Delete icon for disabled status VDOMs. What does this exactly mean for the device and the provided services? Only the configuration is frozen and cannot be administered or deleted, per vdom defined administrators cannot login, but the services are still online? What is the motivation for disabling vdoms by design?
I interpreted it as a way to disable all belonging interfaces as once and tell the device not to waste cpu cycles for this vdom but keep the configuration for later use.
Thanks for any suggestions
Michael
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It means"exactly" what you stated, it's offline, fwpolicy/proxy/inspection cease to function.
It would be exactly like you stated "shutdown or a fw with no power".
Ken
PCNSE
NSE
StrongSwan
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