Fabric Automation and Orchestration
    
        
            XCO automates and orchestrates SLX IP fabrics, Extreme 8000 series, and tenant
                networks, with support for the following: 
                    - Building and managing small
                        data center (non-Clos) fabrics and 3-stage and 5-stage IP Clos fabrics
 
                    - Managing tenant-aware Layer 2
                        and Layer 3 networks 
 
                    - Integrating Virtual
                        Management ecosystem platforms, such as VMWare vCenter and Microsoft
                        SCVMM
 
                    - Providing a single point of
                        configuration for your entire fabric
 
                
 
            XCO consists of core K3s containerized services that interact with each other and
                with other infrastructure services to provide the core functions of fabric and
                tenant network automation. For more information, see XCO Microservices.
        
        
        Deployment
            
            For more information about deployment scenarios, see the 
    ExtremeCloud Orchestrator Deployment Guide,
     3.5.0
   .
            
                
                    - XCO on TPVM
 
                    - TPVM (Third-Party Virtual
                        Machine) is a guest VM that resides on Extreme SLX devices. You can run XCO from the SLX 9150, SLX 9250, Extreme 8520, Extreme 8720, or SLX 9740
                        TPVM. In this context, XCO leverages the K3S Kubernetes cluster as an underlying infrastructure for
                        the XCO services deployment. The K3S cluster is a single instance and an
                        important component for supporting high availability. A maximum of 24
                        devices is supported, either 24 devices in one fabric or 24 devices across
                        multiple fabrics.
 
                
            
            
                
                    - XCO on an external VM
 
                    - You can deploy XCO on an external Virtual Machine to support more than 24 devices or based
                        on where tools are deployed in the data center. 
 
                
            
            
                
                    - XCO for high availability
 
                    - A high-availability cluster
                        is a group of servers that provide continuous up time, or at least minimum
                        down time, for the applications on the servers in the group. If an
                        application on one server fails, another server in the cluster maintains the
                        availability of the service or application. You can install XCO on a two-node cluster, including on TPVM, for high availability.