Hardware requirements in this situation…
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2 subnets will be capped bigtime. One is a free-ish public wifi point (capped at 2mbit per device, vpn blocked etc.) and another is for actual customers using an account through CP. But less restrictions max. 8mbit per device for example.
The final subnet is for the company stuff itself, and is 'unmetered'.I guess I'm gonna need that network card :) Unless someone else has useful advise.
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You can use VLANs and a manged switch to get extra interfaces, perhaps you already have suitable one?
Steve
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@Steve - No, my switches are unmanaged. Replacing them (3x 24p gbit) would be much more expensive than getting the extra card.
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That would certainly be true but an additional 5 or 8 port managed switch may not be. It's just a suggestion, I would personally not do VLANs unless I have to. Removing complexity usually results in less problems. ;)
Steve
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@Steve - No, my switches are unmanaged. Replacing them (3x 24p gbit) would be much more expensive than getting the extra card.
You can get a Netgear 10-port Smart switch for under $100. Use that for your VLAN backbone and then segregate the subnets with unmanaged switches branching off the Netgear Smart switch. Technically you can have 9 physical VLANs ports on it going to 9 unmanaged switches for each VLAN. It can handle lots of VLANs if you have other managed switches connecting to it.
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Hmm I see, but as you said yourself, removing complexity is better. :)
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Hmm I see, but as you said yourself, removing complexity is better. :)
Actually, asterix was proposing the cost-effectiveness of a smart switch:
@asterix:You can get a Netgear 10-port Smart switch for under $100. Use that for your VLAN backbone and then segregate the subnets with unmanaged switches branching off the Netgear Smart switch. Technically you can have 9 physical VLANs ports on it going to 9 unmanaged switches for each VLAN. It can handle lots of VLANs if you have other managed switches connecting to it.
while stephenw10 was the one positing that less complexity = less problems:
@stephenw10:That would certainly be true but an additional 5 or 8 port managed switch may not be. It's just a suggestion, I would personally not do VLANs unless I have to. Removing complexity usually results in less problems.
Personally, I'm not having much fun with VLANs at the moment myself, but I also have zero experience with them :P
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Start with a Netgear GS108Tv2. It's cheap, gigabit, extremely well built and very stable. I learnt all about VLANs playing on this. I have now moved to a 48-port GSM7248v2 managed switch which has the same GUI as the GS108Tv2 but with extra features.
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Right, but I'm not looking to set up a VLAN kind of setup.
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Just giving you options. There are pros and cons for vlans over additional NICs.
Steve
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Correction .. the Netgear GS108Tv2 is a 8-port and not a 10-port… still cheaper than adding a multiport NIC. I was in similar situation when I first started using pfSense and adding the Netgear GS108Tv2 was the smart thing to do ;)
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I see :) Thanks.