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What's New in R82.10?
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Maestro Madness
In the past few weeks, I’ve worked on several projects where I had to decide whether to continue using ClusterXL or switch to ElasticXL.
That’s why I keep asking myself: what is the ideal choice to use at the moment?
What are your experiences, and which path are you choosing?
ClusterXL R82 ClusterXL Administration Guide - ClusterXL Modes |
| Advantages | Disadvantages |
| Mature and proven technology – ClusterXL has been around for many versions and is well-documented. | Limited scalability: Sync overhead grows with the number of cluster members, especially in Load Sharing mode. |
| Supports both High Availability (HA) and Load Sharing (Active/Active) modes. | IPv6 limitations: Historically limited in Load Sharing mode. |
| HA mode provides simple redundancy: one active member and one standby, ideal for traditional failover setups. | Less future-oriented: Not designed for dynamic scaling or on-the-fly resource expansion. |
| Load Sharing mode allows multiple members to process traffic simultaneously, increasing throughput. | |
| Extensive field experience – well-understood by admins and supported by many best practices. | |
| VSX support |
ElasticXL R82 Scalable Platforms Administration Guide - Working with ElasticXL Cluster |
| Advantages | Disadvantages |
| Modern architecture: Introduced in Check Point R82 as a next-generation clustering model. | New technology: Still relatively new, so there’s less real-world experience and potential early-stage issues. |
| Single Management Object (SMO): The cluster is managed as one unified gateway object, simplifying administration. | Feature limitations: Some traditional modes (like “Traditional VSX”) are not yet supported. |
| Simplified scalability: Members can be added or removed on the fly, cloning configuration and software automatically from the SMO. | Migration effort: Moving from ClusterXL to ElasticXL requires planning and possibly new tools or workflows. The conversion tool from VSX to VSNext will be released later. |
| Dual-site support: Enables deployment across two physical locations. | Operational learning curve: ElasticXL introduces new management and deployment concepts that differ from classic clusters. |
| Improved flexibility and scaling: Designed for elastic, cloud-like environments with dynamic growth. | |
| VSNext support |
Thanks for that Heiko, super helpful.
FWIW, from chatgpt:
Here are important comparisons you’ll want to evaluate:
| Feature | ClusterXL | ElasticXL |
|---|---|---|
| Architecture & management | Traditional clustering: configure each member, cluster object in SmartConsole, manual sync of config/state. sc1.checkpoint.com+1 | New style: cluster acts as one object (SMO), simpler member onboarding, automatic sync of config/software. Check Point CheckMates+1 |
| Max cluster size / scalability | Up to 5 members in load sharing mode (but performance drops over ~4) according to R81.10 guide. sc1.checkpoint.com+1 | Up to 3 members per site (and up to 6 in total across a dual‑site) in current ElasticXL design. Check Point CheckMates+1 |
| Modes supported | HA (Active/Standby) and Load Sharing (Active/Active) natively. Fir3net+1 | Primarily designed for “load‑sharing pivot/unicast” mode; for HA you can run 2 nodes but the architecture assumptions are slightly different. Check Point CheckMates+1 |
| Member onboarding / operations | More manual: each node must be configured, synced, managed individually. | Much more streamlined: add member, gets config from SMO, fewer manual steps. |
| Feature maturity / support | Very mature, many field deployments, well documented. | Newer: fewer field references, some features may be limited or not yet fully hardened in all use‑cases. One user comment: “I wouldn’t advise moving to R82 unless you have a feature you specifically need.” Reddit |
| Use case fit | Works very well in environments where you need HA or up to moderate scale load‑sharing and you want proven stability. | Better fit when you need higher scale, easier operations, plan for growth, or active/active clusters with multiple nodes. |
| Downside / caveats | May require more manual configuration; performance limitations when scaling; older architecture. | Because it’s newer, some corner‑cases might still have less field maturity; may not yet support all ClusterXL use‑cases or third‑party integrations. E.g., one forum post: “ElasticXL is not intended to replace the classic ClusterXL at this point” and “there are certain clustering situations which ElasticXL will probably never be able to handle”. |
ElasticXL actually isn't all that new. It's mostly a combination of technologies which have existed for years. It's still mostly ClusterXL (managed and inspected with all the same commands, just a new HA-over-LS traffic distribution mode), the members use VMACs, and the configuration stuff is mostly just a cloning group. There is some new stuff, but less than it seems.
Nice work.
A couple of additions:
@PhoneBoy wrote:
- From a licensing perspective, ElasticXL requires less (for the SMO only, whereas a traditional cluster requires one for each gateway).
Important note! This is about management licenses. You still have to have a gateway license for each member of an ElasticXL cluster, but since the whole cluster appears to the management as a single firewall, the whole cluster only consumes one management license.
Thanks for clarifying that, I'll fix that in the original.
Hi @PhoneBoy,
Since I’ve seen this question come up several times in the forum, I decided to write a Maestro licensing article:
Maestro Licensing
@PhoneBoy
As far as I know, the 39xx appliances have ARM-based CPUs, and therefore not all software features have been implemented yet
| PRJ-611 43 | To manage 3900 appliances:
|
| - |
By design, the 3900 appliances do not support the Standalone configuration. |
| PMTR-114921 |
The 3900 appliances do not support the ElasticXL configuration. |
| PMTR-106079, PMTR-114923 |
The 3900 appliances do not support the Maestro configuration. |
| PMTR-114894 |
The 3900 appliances do not support the VSNext mode. |
For new deployments, we try to go with ElasticXL/VSNext as much as possible, this is where the development will be for years to come and better get used with the new tech as soon as possible in real-world situations.
This being said, we have customers who insist on deploying proven technologies because all the changes are too much at the same time when you add features like UPPAK, P/E cores and so on.
Obviously, a migration tool would greatly help with the technological adoption, we seldom have the opportunity to completely tear down and recreate production clusters.
In recent weeks, we have been increasingly deploying ElasticXL for our customers, as it provides the possibility of scalability.
As far as I understand:
On SMB Appliances (often left out when regarding features): Only ClusterXL in HA Mode is supported.
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