[HamWAN PSDR] Component Engineering: Ethernet Switch - 8 port
Bart Kus
me at bartk.us
Thu Feb 28 10:40:41 PST 2013
Steve,
I believe I said exactly this in my email. :) It's the advantages we
both pointed out here that have me kind of excited for this approach.
Ben,
The centralization here is not a new danger. With a single switch @
each site, there was always a SPoF
<http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Single_point_of_failure>. A site going
down needs to be pulled into redundancy planning.
--Bart
On 02/28/2013 08:55 AM, Steve wrote:
> If you are using Microtik routers... why would you not use their
> multiport router/switches? Keep it all in the same famility. Their
> cost is not that much even if you just used it as a switch compaired
> to Cisco. And you never know when the router part might be handy.
> The main reason is you might run into some compatibility issues down
> the road. Also, that means you have to learn and keep in your head
> mutiliple CLI's and OS's. What a pain.
> Just my 2 cents from working in a mixed router / switch enviroment. It
> sucks.... :-) Yes, your tied to one vendor, but your sorta doing
> that already by selecting Microtik as your main wireless radio.
> Or am I missing something here??
> Steve N0FPF
>
>
> On Thu, Feb 28, 2013 at 3:50 AM, Benjamin Krueger
> <ben.krueger at gmail.com <mailto:ben.krueger at gmail.com>> wrote:
>
> They look good. I'll take a more detailed review tomorrow. Do
> remember that if we centralize routing, we're also centralizing
> failure. One bad switch can now take down an entire site.
>
>
> On Thu, Feb 28, 2013 at 3:15 AM, Bart Kus <me at bartk.us
> <mailto:me at bartk.us>> wrote:
>
> Dear Ben-Jammin',
>
> So you might recall our recent discussion where you weighed in
> favor of putting "real" switches into the cell sites to tie
> the radios together. My major pushback to you was the price of
> a typical Cisco/etc switch.
>
> Well, I've updated the "Ethernet Switch - 8 port
> <https://www.hamwan.org/t/tiki-index.php?page=Ethernet+Switch+-+8+port&structure=HamWAN>"
> page with 3 new alternatives! They're a miniscule amount of
> money more than the D-Link smart switch, and are in fact full
> blown RouterOS routers. They also feature 2 more ports (10
> total) than the 8-port requirement, but the catch is only 5 of
> the ports are GigE. This might be OK since all the 5SHPn
> radios are 100Mbit only. The GigE requirement was for
> future-proofing only.
>
> The other super nice thing is they can do MPLS-TE and preserve
> QoS. This might simplify the network structure a lot by
> moving routing off of the modems and into these routers.
> Instead of 7 linked routers at a busy cell site, we'd have 1.
> The routing tables get a lot easier. These routers also have
> more routing horsepower than what's in the modems. Especially
> the $105 model, which features a faster CPU and twice the RAM.
>
> 2 of the 3 are also rack-mountable, which might be a good
> thing in most sites.
>
> Finally, the idea of using a single OS for all networking is
> appealing. No need for fragmented administrator education,
> and all the gear is designed to work together.
>
> Let me know what you think. I'm kinda psyched about this
> approach. I ordered a RB2011UAS-2HnD-IN for my personal home
> use to replace my AP+router here. We'll see how it works out
> here.
>
> --Bart
>
> RB2011UAS2HnDIN
>
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>
> --
> Benjamin
>
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