Multible subnets on pfsense?
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now i´m fooling alittle bit around with the trafiic shaper, but i dont think it works all that good for me, or perhaps i´m doing something wrong
we have a 10/10 mbit fwa connection from our isp, and in the traffic shaper wizard, i have typed that my lan is 10000 kbits/second and wan is 10000 kbits/second is this correct, i then tried to traffic shape p2p, especially direct connect, as only 1 % of the total bandwidth, but i could still download with almost 10mbit from dc++?
Check out this post:
http://forum.pfsense.org/index.php?topic=63.0–Bill
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ive seen this type of setup at a friends job location, and i dont mean to be an ass… but such a complex configuration, for a site that functions as a single lan? if all computers can ping each other as if they were all on the same subnet... all that routing inside the site makes no sense to me. wouldnt it be easier to jsut change the subnetmask to 255.255.252.0, and have 192.168.0.1 thru 192.168.3.254 as one giant subnet, and just do away with all the internal routing? the gateway would surely then be a much simpler config.
im definatly interested in knowing the method of your madness :)
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Well, judging by his picture a few reasons that I can see…..:
- 500 hosts won't fit into a /24 address
- why have 500 hosts worth of broadcast packets flying around when you can contain everything within each subnet
- management reasons
We have a similar setup here at work, although on a much larger scale (150 VLAN's, 4600 hosts). Every building has it's own VLAN and subnet. While we could theorhetically have the whole site under a /19 address, it's just much more practical from a management standpoint to use subnets. Plus it makes it way easier to track down problems, etc, etc.
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well, i was suggesting a /22 (or /23, for just 500).
in a windows environmet, the bulk of the broadcast traffic is quelled using a group policy to disable the computer browser service (which isnt needed on 2000 or greater, and i think even NT4 doesnt need it).
what management reasons? thinair, does your site have 1 main internet connection? i just dont see what the benefit is to have such a complex configuration for a single lan, that is connected as if its one contiguous lan.
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One internet connection, two routers, one routes odd numbered VLAN's and the other routes even numbered VLAN's, and if one fails the other will route all VLANs (for load balancing and failover).
We have a lot of buildings on site, right now we only have fibre run to 148 buildings, so we have 148 VLAN's. Each building has it's own VLAN. If someone does something that they shouldn't do (like plug a personal laptop into our network), we can quickly narrow it down to which building it is just by looking at it's IP address, then shut down the port on that switch. We have roughly 250 switches by the way. Also it keeps the broadcast domain within the building itself. Plus it's a fairly secure network, so we don't need someone on the opposite end of our site to sniff broadcasts.
Our smaller networks don't have VLAN's yet, although our second largest network will soon be NAT'd and VLAN'd, we're getting near our 510 IP address limit.
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the config of our network, is just as thinair says, configured by this way, to get a better manament and diagnostic situation
having a differetn vlan and subnet pr. building, we currently have 15 buildings, makes it easier to identify a computers location, by its ip.
also since none of the users are on the 192.168.1.0 subnet, we are also protected from someone that plugs a access point or a router that has 192.168.1.1 as default ip into our network, and bringing the whole thing down, or if someone accidently adds a dhcp server to the network, it´s only building that goes down, and not the whole network.
sure, they can ping across the vlans, but they cant see eachother in network neighbourhood, so that adds a little extra protection.
but anyway, thanks for all the nice inputs.
sincerely Carsten
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Well as it's been stated before. Subnetting is dumb for in your house or in a small business(assuming it's not IT-related) but if you are in a larger business or a IT-related small business(aka….ISP/co-location firm) then it makes lots of sense.
ie...(here's an example)
At one of my jobs I work for the IT department at a college(small school), there are about 1200 students on the campus network besides about 1,000 desktops/servers, 100 printers, and 100 or so switches. Last year this was a flat network (ie....just one vlan) and it bit us in the ass, the network went down for a couple of days (oh, by the way....I'm not incharge of the network..just the intern) so they subnetted the students off into a class-b non-routable network because of the broadcast traffic...(klez/mydoom/....insert virus of choice) after subnetting the students off from the rest of the network everything was fine till there was a fence-jumper....killed the network in the spring. Did it get fixed? not yet....running 3 vlans now but still having issues every-other-week. Why because people didn't plan for grow years ago and now it's a huge project to change everything over.
Moral of the story....in business if your wonder if you should subnet the network or not, seriously consider it as it can come back to bite you in the ass a couple years down the road.
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ive seen this type of setup at a friends job location, and i dont mean to be an ass… but such a complex configuration, for a site that functions as a single lan? if all computers can ping each other as if they were all on the same subnet... all that routing inside the site makes no sense to me. wouldnt it be easier to jsut change the subnetmask to 255.255.252.0, and have 192.168.0.1 thru 192.168.3.254 as one giant subnet, and just do away with all the internal routing? the gateway would surely then be a much simpler config.
im definatly interested in knowing the method of your madness :)
Large broadcast domains suck ass, keep your subnets small (especially if you have Windows boxes as they are EXTREMELY chatty).
–Bill
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Well as it's been stated before. Subnetting is dumb for in your house or in a small business(assuming it's not IT-related) but if you are in a larger business or a IT-related small business(aka….ISP/co-location firm) then it makes lots of sense.
Ohhh, subnetting at home has a LOT of uses, none of which the AVERAGE user needs (especially when you consider that the average user has a whopping one peeeceee).
–Bill
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by the way, i forgot to mention that this is not a office network, but 500 apartments and groving, that are sharing the same internet connection, together with cheap telephone, and cheap tv here in denmark
when we began to make this network, be did a lot of thinking about the structure before we implemented it, and i think today, we are happy with our subnetting, cause we get bigger and bigger with more apartments all the time, so its nice to have done things the right way from scratch.
anyway thanks for the replyes
sincerely
Carsten
www.sundbynet.dk