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Getting Started with NetScaler
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Deploy a NetScaler VPX instance
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Optimize NetScaler VPX performance on VMware ESX, Linux KVM, and Citrix Hypervisors
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Apply NetScaler VPX configurations at the first boot of the NetScaler appliance in cloud
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Configure simultaneous multithreading for NetScaler VPX on public clouds
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Install a NetScaler VPX instance on Microsoft Hyper-V servers
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Install a NetScaler VPX instance on Linux-KVM platform
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Prerequisites for installing NetScaler VPX virtual appliances on Linux-KVM platform
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Provisioning the NetScaler virtual appliance by using OpenStack
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Provisioning the NetScaler virtual appliance by using the Virtual Machine Manager
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Configuring NetScaler virtual appliances to use SR-IOV network interface
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Configuring NetScaler virtual appliances to use PCI Passthrough network interface
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Provisioning the NetScaler virtual appliance by using the virsh Program
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Provisioning the NetScaler virtual appliance with SR-IOV on OpenStack
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Configuring a NetScaler VPX instance on KVM to use OVS DPDK-Based host interfaces
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Deploy a NetScaler VPX instance on AWS
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Deploy a VPX high-availability pair with elastic IP addresses across different AWS zones
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Deploy a VPX high-availability pair with private IP addresses across different AWS zones
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Protect AWS API Gateway using the NetScaler Web Application Firewall
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Configure a NetScaler VPX instance to use SR-IOV network interface
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Configure a NetScaler VPX instance to use Enhanced Networking with AWS ENA
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Deploy a NetScaler VPX instance on Microsoft Azure
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Network architecture for NetScaler VPX instances on Microsoft Azure
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Configure multiple IP addresses for a NetScaler VPX standalone instance
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Configure a high-availability setup with multiple IP addresses and NICs
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Configure a high-availability setup with multiple IP addresses and NICs by using PowerShell commands
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Deploy a NetScaler high-availability pair on Azure with ALB in the floating IP-disabled mode
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Configure a NetScaler VPX instance to use Azure accelerated networking
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Configure HA-INC nodes by using the NetScaler high availability template with Azure ILB
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Configure a high-availability setup with Azure external and internal load balancers simultaneously
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Configure a NetScaler VPX standalone instance on Azure VMware solution
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Configure a NetScaler VPX high availability setup on Azure VMware solution
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Configure address pools (IIP) for a NetScaler Gateway appliance
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Deploy a NetScaler VPX instance on Google Cloud Platform
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Deploy a VPX high-availability pair on Google Cloud Platform
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Deploy a VPX high-availability pair with external static IP address on Google Cloud Platform
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Deploy a single NIC VPX high-availability pair with private IP address on Google Cloud Platform
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Deploy a VPX high-availability pair with private IP addresses on Google Cloud Platform
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Install a NetScaler VPX instance on Google Cloud VMware Engine
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Solutions for Telecom Service Providers
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Load Balance Control-Plane Traffic that is based on Diameter, SIP, and SMPP Protocols
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Provide Subscriber Load Distribution Using GSLB Across Core-Networks of a Telecom Service Provider
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Authentication, authorization, and auditing application traffic
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Basic components of authentication, authorization, and auditing configuration
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Web Application Firewall protection for VPN virtual servers and authentication virtual servers
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On-premises NetScaler Gateway as an identity provider to Citrix Cloud
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Authentication, authorization, and auditing configuration for commonly used protocols
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Troubleshoot authentication and authorization related issues
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Persistence and persistent connections
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Advanced load balancing settings
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Gradually stepping up the load on a new service with virtual server–level slow start
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Protect applications on protected servers against traffic surges
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Retrieve location details from user IP address using geolocation database
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Use source IP address of the client when connecting to the server
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Use client source IP address for backend communication in a v4-v6 load balancing configuration
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Set a limit on number of requests per connection to the server
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Configure automatic state transition based on percentage health of bound services
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Use case 2: Configure rule based persistence based on a name-value pair in a TCP byte stream
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Use case 3: Configure load balancing in direct server return mode
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Use case 6: Configure load balancing in DSR mode for IPv6 networks by using the TOS field
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Use case 7: Configure load balancing in DSR mode by using IP Over IP
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Use case 10: Load balancing of intrusion detection system servers
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Use case 11: Isolating network traffic using listen policies
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Use case 12: Configure Citrix Virtual Desktops for load balancing
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Use case 13: Configure Citrix Virtual Apps and Desktops for load balancing
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Use case 14: ShareFile wizard for load balancing Citrix ShareFile
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Use case 15: Configure layer 4 load balancing on the NetScaler appliance
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Default Settings for the Integrated Cache
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Authentication and authorization for System Users
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Configuring a CloudBridge Connector Tunnel between two Datacenters
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Configuring CloudBridge Connector between Datacenter and AWS Cloud
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Configuring a CloudBridge Connector Tunnel Between a Datacenter and Azure Cloud
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Configuring CloudBridge Connector Tunnel between Datacenter and SoftLayer Enterprise Cloud
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Configuring a CloudBridge Connector Tunnel Between a NetScaler Appliance and Cisco IOS Device
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CloudBridge Connector Tunnel Diagnostics and Troubleshooting
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Default settings for the integrated cache
The NetScaler integrated cache feature provides built-in policies with default settings and initial settings for the Default content group. The information in this section defines the parameters for the built-in policies and Default content group.
Default caching policies
The integrated cache has built-in policies. The NetScaler appliance evaluates the policies in a particular order, as discussed in the following sections.
You can override these built-in policies with a user-defined policy that is bound to a request-time override or response-time override policy bank.
Note If you configured policies prior to release 9.0 and specified the -precedeDefRules parameter when binding the policies, they are automatically assigned to override-time bind points during migration.
View default policies
The built-in policy names start with an underscore (_). You can view the built-in policies from the command line and the administrative console using the show cache policy command.
Default request policies
You can override the following built-in request time policies by configuring new policies and binding them to the request-time override processing point. In the following policies, note that the MAY_NOCACHE action stipulates that the transaction is cached only when there is a user-configured or built-in CACHE directive at response time.
The following policies are bound to the _reqBuiltinDefaults policy label. They are listed in priority order.
Do not cache a response for a request that uses any method other than GET.
The policy name is _nonGetReq. The following is the policy rule:
!HTTP.REQ.METHOD.eq(GET)
Set a NOCACHE action for a request with header value that contains If-Match or If-Unmodified-Since.
The policy name is _advancedConditionalReq. The following is the policy rule:
HTTP.REQ.HEADER("If-Match").EXISTS || HTTP.REQ.HEADER("If-Unmodified-Since").EXISTS
Set a MAY_NOCACHE action for a request with the following header values: Cookie, Authorization, Proxy-authorization, or a request which contains the NTLM or Negotiate header.
The policy name is _personalizedReq. The following is the policy rule:
HTTP.REQ.HEADER("Cookie").EXISTS || HTTP.REQ.HEADER("Authorization").EXISTS || HTTP.REQ.HEADER("Proxy-Authorization").EXISTS || HTTP.REQ.IS_NTLM_OR_NEGOTIATE
Default response policies
You can override the following default response-time policies by configuring new policies and binding them to the response-time override processing point.
The following policies are bound to the _resBuiltinDefaults policy label and are evaluated in the order in which they are listed:
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Do not cache HTTP responses unless they are of type 200, 304, 307, 203 or if the types are between 400 and 499 or between 300 and 302.
The policy name is _uncacheableStatusRes. The following is the policy rule:
!((HTTP.RES.STATUS.EQ(200)) || (HTTP.RES.STATUS.EQ(304)) || (HTTP.RES.STATUS.BETWEEN(400,499)) || (HTTP.RES.STATUS.BETWEEN(300, 302)) || (HTTP.RES.STATUS.EQ(307))|| (HTTP.RES.STATUS.EQ(203)))
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Do not cache an HTTP response if it has a Vary header with a value of anything other than Accept-Encoding.
The compression module inserts the Vary: Accept_Encoding header. The name of this expression is _uncacheableVaryRes. The following is the policy rule:
((HTTP.RES.HEADER("Vary").EXISTS) && ((HTTP.RES.HEADER("Vary").INSTANCE(1).LENGTH > 0) || (!HTTP.RES.HEADER("Vary").STRIP_END\_WS.SET_TEXT_MODE(IGNORECASE).eq("Accept-Encoding"))))
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Do not cache a response if its Cache-Control header value is No-Cache, No-Store, or Private, or if the Cache-Control header is not valid.
The policy name is _uncacheableCacheControlRes. The following is the policy rule:
((HTTP.RES.CACHE\_CONTROL.IS\_PRIVATE) || (HTTP.RES.CACHE\_CONTROL.IS\_NO\_CACHE) || (HTTP.RES.CACHE\_CONTROL.IS\_NO\_STORE) || (HTTP.RES.CACHE\_CONTROL.IS\_INVALID))
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Cache responses if the Cache-Control header has one of the following values: Public, Must-Revalidate, Proxy-Revalidate, Max-Age, S-Maxage.
The policy name is _cacheableCacheControlRes. The following is the policy rule:
((HTTP.RES.CACHE_CONTROL.IS_PUBLIC) || (HTTP.RES.CACHE_CONTROL.IS_MAX_AGE) || (HTTP.RES.CACHE_CONTROL.IS_MUST_REVALIDATE) || (HTTP.RES.CACHE_CONTROL.IS_PROXY_REVALIDATE) || (HTTP.RES.CACHE_CONTROL.IS_S_MAXAGE))
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Do not cache responses that contain a Pragma header.
The name of the policy is _uncacheablePragmaRes. The following is the policy rule:
HTTP.RES.HEADER("Pragma").EXISTS
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Cache responses that contain an Expires header.
The name of the policy is _cacheableExpiryRes. The following is the policy rule:
HTTP.RES.HEADER("Expires").EXISTS
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If the response contains a Content-Type header with a value of Image, remove any cookies in the header and cache it.
The name of the policy is _imageRes. The following is the policy rule:
HTTP.RES.HEADER("Content-Type").SET_TEXT_MODE(IGNORECASE).STARTSWITH("image/")
You can configure the following content group to work with this policy:
add cache contentgroup nocookie -group -removeCookies YES
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Do not cache a response that contains a Set-Cookie header.
The name of the policy is _ personalizedRes. The following is the policy rule:
HTTP.RES.HEADER(“Set-Cookie”).EXISTS
Restrictions on default policies
You cannot override the following built-in request time policies with user-defined policies.
These policies are listed in priority order.
- Do not cache any responses if the corresponding HTTP request lacks a GET or POST method.
- Do not cache any responses for a request if the HTTP request URL length plus host name exceeds 1744 byes.
- Do not cache a response for a request that contains an If-Match header.
- Do not cache a request that contains an If-Unmodified-Since header.
Note This is different from the If-Modified-Since header.
- Do not cache a response if the server does not set an expiry header.
You cannot override the following built-in response time policies. These policies are evaluated in the order in which they are listed:
- Do not cache responses that have an HTTP response status code of 201, 202, 204, 205, or 206.
- Do not cache responses that have an HTTP response status code of 4xx, with the exceptions of status codes 403, 404, and 410.
- Do not cache responses if the response type is FIN terminated, or the response does not have one of the following attributes: Content-Length, or Transfer-Encoding: Chunked.
- Do not cache the response if the caching module cannot parse its Cache-Control header.
Initial settings for the default content group
When you first enable integrated caching, the NetScaler appliance provides one predefined content group named the Default content group. For detailed information, see Default content group settings table.
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