2024-10-22

CML2 - Some Thoughts and Comparison to EVE-ng

Since I'm back in study mode I thought I'd get a hold of a Cisco Moddeling Labs (CML)2 licence so that I can try and gain some efficiency and therefore more focus in LABs at hand rather than troubleshooting and working around various kinks and nuances of the LAB environment, which I found I was doing a lot of in EVE-ng (prior to 6.0.x).

Installation

Once the purchase over at lerningnetworkstore was complete, Installation was quite straight forward except I had an extra step, which I will explain later.

Here's the high-level steps I took to acomplish the task;

  1. Downloaded the OVA and the refplat bundle from the Cisco software center
  2. Copied the OVA to the hypervisor
  3. Converted the vmdk from the OVA to qcow2
  4. Imported the qcow2 image into the hypervisor
Step 3 was only required for me since I'm using QEMU/KVM+libvrt as my hypervisor, but a quick search online guided me to the solution which allowed me to almost seamlessly import it.

I imported the qcow2 image and started the VM, but it would not boot properly, but it seems as though UEFI is required. Easy fix.

Initial Setup

Initial setup required access to the VM console, but it was very straight forward, it offered to use DHCP, expand the disk to its biggest possible extent and set the passwords. All quite lacklustre, painless and somewhat anticlimactic.

Once booted the console informs you that you can log into the CML application and also the Cockpit web interface for sysadmin tasks (queue the sysadmin credentials).

Licence and Registration

At first login to CML the application setup continues a bit more, you then can register the instance by inputting the licence key (providing you're not distracted by the setup option to navigate away from the wizard).

LAB Time

Once CML is configured I seem to remember it immediately creating a new lab and leaving me in the driving seat at that point. I found it trivial to navigate, add nodes access console, create links etc.

So far so good. Less than a couple of hours to set up as opposed to EVE-ng, which took me over a few hours to install from scratch (ISO) in a VM and that's not including the time it took to copy and set up each image (convert the few Cisco qcow2 images that were actually raw), test and then start labbing and figure out all the strange and weird behaviours like interface state configuration not being saved in exported configs etc.

I have no idea yet how to add custom (non-Cisco) nodes to CML. I know that qcow2 images (only) can be added, but they demand a lot of hypervisor options for node definitions, which I also don't want to have to worry myself over. And then theres the quirk of how node default node definitions are read-only. I want to edit them but CML scares you into not doing so warning you that it could break LABs and there doesn't seem to be an option to revert them back to default.

Another quirk I found is that CML (out of the box) doesn't give you the same sort of naming construct as EVE-ng does with bulk node numbering. While you can prefix nodes, it puts a '-' and then a number which is starts from 0, not 1. So I end up with R-0, R-1, R-2 and so on. Not a big deal as renaming is fairly straight-forward, but renaming 5-10 devices isn't something I want to have to spend time doing.

The last thing I'd like to mention is that that I'm noticing a lot of EVE-ng like similarities with regards to LAB IDs, exported configs (or as CML puts it Fetch config, which I discovered needs to be done individually on each node in order to include the config in the exported LAB YAML).

Final Opinion

CML is very polished. It's a breath of fresh air for Cisco-centric stuff out-of-the-box. Where it is lacking though is the system performance in the bottom bar is quite distracting. When starting a lab and while its settling or whenever a router reloads or just decides it needs more CPU, you the user see it. This is distraction and if there isn't an option to toggle it off or hide it completely, there should be. I want to focus on the LAB at hand not sysadmin tasks.

I've never been a fan of the EVE-ng UNL file format for UNet Labs, but the ability to easily export and import labs in a standard file format (YAML) is fantastic.

Licensing is something that I don't like. While CML does come with an eval licence, you still have to purchase it to get access to download it. CML Personal could still be free/accessible for personal/eval use and could include a perpetual licence or just require it to be registered to get a free licence would be better. Cisco are definitely bringing in a revenue stream across the entire CML product-line, but that goes without saying that they probably pumped a lot of resources into developing the KVM+Cockpit-based hypervisor and WebGUI into quite a polished product which also has a rich API for automation which can be leveraged for things like CI/CD.

The disk capacity of the OVA seems rather small, so I'm going to consider using libvirts guestfs tools to expand the qcow2 image and then figure out how to expand the PV/LV within the OS/Cockpit.

CML is now my go-to Network Modelling LAB tool for my next CCNP ENARSI exam since it offers less quirks and more polish to allow me to more easily create, manage and operate my labs and focus on what matters. Learning.

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