Table 2.
WLAN controller platforms
Platform
Deployment
Mode
Preferred
Topology
Maximum APs
Maximum
Clients
Controller
Throughput
Cisco Catalyst
9800-80
Centralized,
FlexConnect,
or SD-Access
Large Campus
6,000
64,000
Up to 80 Gbps
Cisco Catalyst
9800-40
Centralized,
FlexConnect,
or SD-Access
Medium Campus
2,000
32,000
Up to 40 Gbps
Cisco Catalyst
9800-L
Centralized,
FlexConnect,
or SD-Access
Small Campus /
Remote Site
250
5,000
Up to 5 Gbps
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Platform
Deployment
Mode
Preferred
Topology
Maximum APs
Maximum
Clients
Controller
Throughput
Cisco Catalyst
9800-L with
Performance
License
Centralized,
FlexConnect,
or SD-Access
Small Campus /
Remote Site
500
10,000
Up to 9 Gbps
Cisco Catalyst
9800 embedded
on Cisco Catalyst
9000 Series
Switches
SD-Access
SD-Access Small
Distributed Site
200
4,000
—
(local switching)
Cisco Catalyst
9800 Embedded
on Catalyst 9100
Series Access
Points (EWC)
Local Switching
Small Remote Site 100
2,000
—
(local switching)
Cisco Catalyst
9800-CL for
Public Cloud
FlexConnect with
Local Switching
Virtual Controller
for Small Remote
Sites
1,000,
3,000, or
6,000
10,000,
32,000, or
64,000
—
(local switching)
Cisco Catalyst
9800-CL for
Private Cloud
Centralized,
FlexConnect,
or SD-Access
Virtual controller
for Small, Medium,
or Large Sites
1,000,
3,000 (central), or
6,000
(FlexConnect)
10,000,
32,000 (central), or
64,000
(FlexConnect)
Up to 2.1 Gbps
with Central
Switching (IOS XE
17.1 and higher)
Additional scale numbers, including maximum Site Tags, Flex APs per site, Policy Tags, RF tags, RF Profiles, Policy Profiles,
and Flex Profiles can be found in the datasheets of individual wireless controller platforms.
Because software license flexibility allows you to add additional APs when requirements of an organization
change, you can choose the controller that will support your needs long term, but you purchase incremental
access point licenses only when you need them.
Cisco Catalyst 9800 Series configuration model
The Cisco Catalyst 9800 Series wireless controller configuration data model is based on design principles of
reusability, simplified provisioning, enhanced flexibility and modularization to help manage networks as they
scale up and simplify the management of dynamically changing business and IT requirements. The
configuration model maps APs to three types of tags - policy tags, site tags, and RF tags.
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Page 34 of 76
Cisco Catalyst 9800 Series configuration model
Figure 22.
Wireless clients and APs derive their configurations from the profiles contained within the tags. The properties
of a tag are defined by the policies defined within profiles associated with the tag. Profiles represent a set of
attributes that are applied to the wireless clients associated to the APs or to the APs themselves. Profiles are
reusable entities that can be used across tags.
Policy tags
Policy tags define the broadcast domain (list of WLANs to be broadcast) within the policies of the respective
SSIDs. For ease of deployment, tags can be assigned based on location and filter, as opposed to statically
assigning tags. Policy tags are associated with a WLAN profile and a policy profile—each with their respective
attributes shown in the figure below.
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