It’s a plain Windows 10 workstation for getting into NetEdit’s webGUI, and a plain Juniper vMX switch using vlan 1 for forwarding packets between all the nodes. These are unchanged from the initial setup of my homelab. You’ll need to buy some Aruba stuff to get access into the downloads section of Aruba Support Portal, or become friends with someone that does to do this lab at home. Unfortunately Aruba does not make AOS-CX or NetEdit available for public download. I really like the concept behind NetEdit: a feature-rich fancy UI to do new-school EVPN VXLAN things, CLI change history for when you do old-school network things, and a change validation toolset to avoid bad things from entering production. That was over a month ago, and today is finally the day for long overdue cool AOS-CX stuff in my homelab! Let’s jump into Aruba’s fancy new NetEdit OVA and get it talking to a few AOS-CX virtual switches in the eve-ng instance, no ridiculous cloud tunneling stuff this time around. In the Initial Setup of my Google Cloud Platform (GCP) eve-ng instance, I blabbed on a lot about the tunnel between my condo’s homelab and GCP, saying I’d do cool stuff with ArubaOS-CX (AOS-CX) soon. As always, opinions in this post are solely those of my own, and not necessarily those of any organization I am currently affiliated with or have been in the past.
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