Manual underlay is the correct deployment approach for a brownfield SD-Access scenario. In a greenfield fabric, Cisco DNA Center LAN Automation can build the routed underlay by discovering devices, assigning addresses, and creating the required underlay adjacencies. Brownfield environments already have an installed campus network, addressing plan, routing policy, operational constraints, and production dependencies. Rebuilding that underlay automatically can introduce unnecessary disruption. Cisco SD-Access brownfield designs normally preserve and validate the existing routed underlay, then use Cisco DNA Center to discover devices and automate the fabric overlay, policy, and endpoint segmentation functions. Subnet stretching is not the required deployment model and can create operational complexity. Automated underlay and LAN automation are powerful when the physical network is being newly built, but they are not the safest default for an established production environment. A professional brownfield design should first confirm MTU, routing reachability, loopback advertisements, device support, and fabric readiness before onboarding nodes. Reference topics: SD-Access brownfield migration, manual underlay, Cisco DNA Center, LAN Automation, fabric readiness.
Contribute your Thoughts:
Chosen Answer:
This is a voting comment (?). You can switch to a simple comment. It is better to Upvote an existing comment if you don't have anything to add.
Submit