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Getting Started with Citrix ADC
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Deploy a Citrix ADC VPX instance
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Optimize Citrix ADC VPX performance on VMware ESX, Linux KVM, and Citrix Hypervisors
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Apply Citrix ADC VPX configurations at the first boot of the Citrix ADC appliance in cloud
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Install a Citrix ADC VPX instance on Microsoft Hyper-V servers
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Install a Citrix ADC VPX instance on Linux-KVM platform
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Prerequisites for Installing Citrix ADC VPX Virtual Appliances on Linux-KVM Platform
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Provisioning the Citrix ADC Virtual Appliance by using OpenStack
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Provisioning the Citrix ADC Virtual Appliance by using the Virtual Machine Manager
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Configuring Citrix ADC Virtual Appliances to Use SR-IOV Network Interface
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Configuring Citrix ADC Virtual Appliances to use PCI Passthrough Network Interface
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Provisioning the Citrix ADC Virtual Appliance by using the virsh Program
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Provisioning the Citrix ADC Virtual Appliance with SR-IOV, on OpenStack
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Configuring a Citrix ADC VPX Instance on KVM to Use OVS DPDK-Based Host Interfaces
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Deploy a Citrix ADC 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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Configure a Citrix ADC VPX instance to use SR-IOV network interface
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Configure a Citrix ADC VPX instance to use Enhanced Networking with AWS ENA
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Deploy a Citrix ADC VPX instance on Microsoft Azure
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Network architecture for Citrix ADC VPX instances on Microsoft Azure
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Configure multiple IP addresses for a Citrix ADC 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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Configure a Citrix ADC VPX instance to use Azure accelerated networking
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Configure HA-INC nodes by using the Citrix 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 address pools (IIP) for a Citrix Gateway appliance
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Automate deployment and configurations of Citrix ADC
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Upgrade and downgrade a Citrix ADC appliance
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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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On-premises Citrix 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 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 Citrix ADC appliance
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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 Citrix ADC Appliance and Cisco IOS Device
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CloudBridge Connector Tunnel Diagnostics and Troubleshooting
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Automate deployment and configurations of Citrix ADC
Citrix ADC provides multiple tools to automate your ADC deployments and configurations. This document provides a brief summary of various automation tools and references to various automation resources that you can use to manage ADC configurations.
The following illustration provides an overview of Citrix ADC automation in a hybrid multi cloud (HMC) environment.
Automate Citrix ADC using Citrix ADM
Citrix ADM acts as automation control point to your distributed ADC infrastructure. The Citrix ADM provides comprehensive set of automation capabilities from provisioning ADC appliances to upgrading it. The following are the key automation features of ADM:
- Provisioning Citrix ADC VPX instances on AWS
- Provisioning Citrix ADC VPX instances on Azure
- StyleBooks
- Configuration jobs
- Configuration audit
- ADC upgrades
- SSL certificate management
- Integrations - GitHub, ServiceNow, Event notifications integrations
Citrix ADM blogs and videos on automation
- Application migrations using StyleBooks
- Integrate ADC configurations with CI/CD using ADM StyleBooks
- Simplifying public cloud Citrix ADC deployments through ADM
- 10 ways Citrix ADM service supports easier Citrix ADC upgrades
Citrix ADM also provides APIs for its various capabilities that integrate Citrix ADM and Citrix ADC as part of the overall IT automation. For more information, see Citrix ADM Service APIs.
Automate Citrix ADC using Terraform
Terraform is a tool that takes infrastructure as code approach to provision and manage cloud, infrastructure, or service. Citrix ADC terraform resources are available in GitHub for use. Refer GitHub for detailed documentation and usage.
- Citrix ADC Terraform modules to configure ADC for various use cases such as Load Balancing and GSLB
- Terraform cloud scripts to deploy ADC in AWS
- Terraform cloud scripts to deploy ADC in Azure
Videos on Terraform for ADC automation
- Automate your Citrix ADC deployments with Terraform
- Provision and configure ADC in HA setup in AWS using Terraform
Automate Citrix ADC using Ansible
Ansible is an open-source software provisioning, configuration management, and application-deployment tool enabling infrastructure as code. Citrix ADC Ansible modules and sample playbooks can be found in GitHub for use. Refer GitHub for detailed documentation and usage.
Citrix is a certified Ansible Automation Partner. Users having Red Hat Ansible Automation Platform subscription can access Citrix ADC Collections from Red Hat Automation Hub.
Terraform and Ansible automation blogs
Public cloud templates for ADC deployments
Public cloud templates simplify provisioning of your deployments in public clouds. Different Citrix ADC templates are available for various environments. For usage details, refer to respective GitHub repositories.
AWS CFTs:
Azure Resource Manager (ARM) Templates:
Google Cloud Deployment Manager (GDM) Templates:
Videos on Templates
- Deploy Citrix ADC HA in AWS using CloudFormation Template
- Deploy Citrix ADC HA across Availability Zones using AWS QuickStart
- Citrix ADC HA deployment in GCP using GDM templates
AWS Quick Starts
NITRO APIs
The Citrix ADC NITRO protocol allows you to programmatically configure and monitor the Citrix ADC appliance by using Representational State Transfer (REST) interfaces. Therefore, NITRO applications can be developed in any programming language. For applications that must be developed in Java or .NET or Python, NITRO APIs are exposed through relevant libraries that are packaged as separate Software Development Kits (SDKs).
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