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    Please recommend managed switch for home use?

    Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved Hardware
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    • S
      Soyokaze
      last edited by

      All D-Link DGS-12xx series is okay for home. I even run a small company back in the day.
      HP 1810, 1910 is okay too.
      And, IMHO, for home use you only need VLANs. If you go further with LACP, R/STP and L3 routing - thats not a home setup (and another budget).

      Need full pfSense in a cloud? PM for details!

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      • P
        pfBasic Banned
        last edited by

        I'd recommend the Zyxel GS1900-xHP (or no HP if you don't need PoE).

        They are affordable and great for home use. They include the features you are looking for and more.

        You can even access it via CLI or add a console port to the header. IMO it's a sweet spot for home users looking for more room to experiment and learn.

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        • ?
          Guest
          last edited by

          I would recommend to save more Money for a good one or a better one.

          Layer2

          • Cisco SG200
          • Cisco SG220
          • Zyxel GS1910

          Layer3

          • Cisco SG300
          • Cisco SG350

          Layer3 & 10 GBit/s

          • MikroTik CSR series
            With 10 GBit/s and CLI and Web configuration Layer3 and many features and options, and able to get
            for low budget often might be also a nice try out, but with a deeper learning curve.
          • D-Link DGS1510-20
            This would be my personal choice here to prevent from the LAG and get CLI, Webfig and Layer3 on top
            able to get for ~210 Euros, for your budget would also match the Netgear GS108Tv2.
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          • occamsrazorO
            occamsrazor
            last edited by

            I can't compare with other switches but have been very happy with my Netear GS108Tv2 and GS110TP (adds 2 x SFP ports). Just another option….

            pfSense CE on Qotom Q355G4 8GB RAM/60GB SSD
            Ubiquiti Unifi wired and wireless network, APC UPSs
            Mac OSX and IOS devices, QNAP NAS

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            • S
              s_mason16
              last edited by

              I have a dell powerconnect 2824, when I put it into my network I was thinking it'd have a web-interface that I could go to in my web browser and edit and configure it from there. but from what I searched it doesn't…..I got it for free so im not that upset about it, but I'd like something a little easier to configure seen as I'm still less experienced with pfsense and smart networking.

              Should I look at something a little newer with a web GUI or buy some sort of work around cable so I can access the console and configure it?

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              • F
                Flamez
                last edited by

                @pfBasic:

                I'd recommend the Zyxel GS1900-xHP (or no HP if you don't need PoE).

                They are affordable and great for home use. They include the features you are looking for and more.

                You can even access it via CLI or add a console port to the header. IMO it's a sweet spot for home users looking for more room to experiment and learn.

                I just ordered this Zyxel model from Amazon today.

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                • ?
                  Guest
                  last edited by

                  Should I look at something a little newer with a web GUI or buy some sort of work around cable so I can access the console and configure it?

                  I would at first try out to get it configured by using the CLI and if this is not your "world" and thing you may be
                  able to buy another one, it is for home usage and with no special concern or needs better then spending extra money.

                  @nitewolfgtr
                  With the DGS1510-20 model you will be able to get 20 RJ45 GB LAN Ports, 2x SFP Ports and 2x SFP+ Ports
                  perhaps something to connect faster and easier your equipment, likes DMZ and LAN Switch to your pfSense
                  firewall or your LAN server and your NAS/SAN to the entire network, think about, mostly better then setting
                  up LAGs and the gain is only so minimal that you often will be nothing really see highs up in numbers.

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                  • N
                    nitewolfgtr
                    last edited by

                    Thank you all for your recommendations. Although I agree the DGS1510-20 is better for future proofing myself, I think the price is a bit out of my budget at the moment. Not really looking to spend that much.  Based on everyone's input, I think I will go with Zyxel GS1900. It looks like it has everything I need and the price point is great! I don't see myself upgrading to 10Gb anytime soon and really have no need for it at the moment.

                    Thanks again for all your help!

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                    • ?
                      Guest
                      last edited by

                      I don't see myself upgrading to 10Gb anytime soon and really have no need for it at the moment.

                      Ok that I was not knowing, I was perhaps miss leaded by the LAG (LACP) and thought that an LAG with 2 or 4 cables
                      and ports will be aggregated 2 GBit/s till 4 GBit/s and the usual speed under real conditions from a 10 GBit/s interface
                      is also 2 GBit/s tpo 4 GBit/s pending on the used protocols and services.

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                      • G
                        gjaltemba
                        last edited by

                        @s_mason16

                        What are you talking about? A Dell powerconnect 2824 does have a web interface in managed mode. Default address is 192.168.2.1 User admin no password.

                        http://downloads.dell.com/manuals/all-products/esuprt_ser_stor_net/esuprt_networking/esuprt_net_fxd_prt_swtchs/powerconnect-2824_user%27s%20guide_en-us.pdf

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                        • S
                          s_mason16
                          last edited by

                          @gjaltemba:

                          @s_mason16

                          What are you talking about? A Dell powerconnect 2824 does have a web interface in managed mode. Default address is 192.168.2.1 User admin no password.

                          http://downloads.dell.com/manuals/all-products/esuprt_ser_stor_net/esuprt_networking/esuprt_net_fxd_prt_swtchs/powerconnect-2824_user%27s%20guide_en-us.pdf

                          well thats great then, I did see that address while googling and tried going to it, but nothing and I did an IPscan and it didn't pick anything up. (managed mode was on) maybe I have to not be plugged into pfsense and try it again?

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                          • G
                            gjaltemba
                            last edited by

                            @s_mason16

                            If you picked up a used Dell PC  2824 and do not have the necessary configuration details then the only way I know how to connect is by serial console. Use an inexpensive db9 null modem cable and putty if your computer has a serial port. You only need a few cli commands for a basic network and I find it handier than the web interface.

                            You may find better help in the Dell forum.

                            http://en.community.dell.com/support-forums/network-switches/f/866

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                            • P
                              P3R
                              last edited by

                              @Soyokaze:

                              And, IMHO, for home use you only need VLANs. If you go further with LACP…//...thats not a home setup (and another budget).

                              As far as I know the majority of switches that support VLANs also support LAG and today that normally means LACP as well.

                              Almost every NAS, even those specifically targeting small to medium home use, have multiple NICs, LACP support and the performance to take advantage of it. As an example we can take the €200 Qnap TS-231P.

                              L3 switching, that I very much agree is not home use and definitely a different budget.

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                              • P
                                pfBasic Banned
                                last edited by

                                The only conceivable way to utilize LACP on a small home network as I understand it would be to allow more than one user to utilize a NAS at full speed (or less speed penalty if >2 simultaneous users) simultaneously if the NAS is also configured LACP.
                                whether that is of any value to you depends on how you utilize your NAS, I would imagine the vast majority of home setups wouldn't benefit appreciably.

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                                • ?
                                  Guest
                                  last edited by

                                  And, IMHO, for home use you only need VLANs. If you go further with LACP…//...thats not a home setup (and another budget).

                                  LAG is also common likes VLAN and QoS as today home networking has changed to smaller and/or mid ranged networks
                                  or networking knowledge. As an example, in the mid 90th (95) you where happy to find someone to set up your IPsec
                                  VPN, today they watch "HowTo´s" over that at Youtube!

                                  As far as I know the majority of switches that support VLANs also support LAG and today that normally means LACP as well.

                                  My cheapest switches are only supporting VLANs (Netgear GS105E (25Euro) & Netgear GS108E (40 Euro)) and the LAG is
                                  in the game play for some coins on top of their price (89Euro) with the Netgear GS108Tv2 so I consider that is more common as today.

                                  Almost every NAS, even those specifically targeting small to medium home use, have multiple NICs, LACP support and the performance to take advantage of it. As an example we can take the €200 Qnap TS-231P.

                                  But the benefit from that LAGs mostly over LACP is smaller then the most peoples will imagine or expect from to have.
                                  Only if one line (cable or port) is failing or gets saturated the next one will be started to use!

                                  L3 switching, that I very much agree is not home use and definitely a different budget.

                                  Cisco SG350-10 for ~210 Euro
                                  D-Link DGS-1510-20 ~210 Euro

                                  What is home budget and what not? If you are a teenager you can work and earn here in Germany for 400 Euros per
                                  month without paying tax. So the most of the younger peoples have today more money in the pocket as we where in
                                  the past or in former days.

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                                  • P
                                    pfBasic Banned
                                    last edited by

                                    I think it's fair to say that 200 euros for a switch to handle Netflix is a bit over budget.

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                                    • P
                                      P3R
                                      last edited by

                                      @BlueKobold:

                                      My cheapest switches are only supporting VLANs (Netgear GS105E (25Euro) & Netgear GS108E (40 Euro))…

                                      Yes the Netgear E-series, Web Managed (Plus) switches are the exception that I know of as well, that's the reason I wrote "the majority of" instead of "all" switches.

                                      Only if one line (cable or port) is failing or gets saturated the next one will be started to use!

                                      Yes of course but you forgot to mention the multiple concurrent nodes, that's the main requirement for LACP to be useful.

                                      Cisco SG350-10 for ~210 Euro
                                      D-Link DGS-1510-20 ~210 Euro

                                      Thank you, you prove my point! Over €200 for a switch is definitely not what non-geek homes spend on a switch. If as the OP they require many ports, maybe roughly half of that is a reasonable home budget.

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                                      • johnpozJ
                                        johnpoz LAYER 8 Global Moderator
                                        last edited by

                                        LAG, LACP, Etherchannel, Portchannel..  Doesn't matter what you call it..

                                        To leverage the fatter pipe you created the devices involved have to be smart enough to spread the traffic across the aggregation.

                                        You have clients on 1 side of switch, server on the other.  Which interface does switch see the syn on, which path does he send that to the server on?  The hash used to determine the path is what is going to determine if you can leverage your extra bandwidth and how much of it you do.

                                        How many servers how many clients.. Your 1 client is never going to see more than 1 gig to that server no matter how many paths you aggregate together.. Now if you have lots of clients all talking to the server at the same time, then ok.. Server will be able to push out more than its 1 gig if his other stuff can handle it, cpu, nics, disks, etc..

                                        My point is in a home this rarely makes sense - your burning ports that many homes do not have, and your not going to see any performance increase.  And now you have a way more complex setup.  If your running a server for your dorm or something, or you have a bunch of people in this house all using the same server with fast pipes.. Ok..  How many clients are there?  What exactly are you doing - sorry but streaming even 4k does not require that gig pipe.. You can serve up lots of clients over the 1 gig connection.  Are you moving files back and forth to this server were more than 1 gig makes sense?  Ok then - prob time to move to 10ge on that server..

                                        That is my 2 cents on the subject.

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                                        • P
                                          P3R
                                          last edited by

                                          @pfBasic:

                                          The only conceivable way to utilize LACP on a small home network as I understand it would be to allow more than one user to utilize a NAS at full speed (or less speed penalty if >2 simultaneous users) simultaneously if the NAS is also configured LACP.

                                          Correct.

                                          whether that is of any value to you depends on how you utilize your NAS, I would imagine the vast majority of home setups wouldn't benefit appreciably.

                                          Being a member of a NAS forum that different from this forum is populated by far more normal users than geeks or professionals, I notice the main usage for home NASes being storing and streaming of multimedia and as backup destination. More and more also use it as storage for some constantly writing surveillance cameras (at least full HD today).

                                          In a home with more than 1 person, especially when there's also kids around, there will on evenings easily be several concurrent clients of a home NAS and with 1 active computer, 2 hi-res media streams to smart TVs and/or tablets and two surveillance cameras, single gigabit NAS connections will at times be a bottleneck.

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                                          • P
                                            pfBasic Banned
                                            last edited by

                                            I'm not knocking setting up an LACP on your home network - I have an LACP on my home network (that I don't need).

                                            I'm just pointing out that it is probably not going to be a significant improvement on a home network.

                                            I tihnk most home networks can find times where an LACP prevents a bottleneck that would otherwise be there. i.e., the above home NAS setup with a few users trying to transfer files at the same time. The LACP may well allow three users to DL @ ~600Mbps instead of ~300Mbps, but 300Mbps is still moving a gig every 30 seconds. So while yes it can be a speed improvement on home networks, not many home networks will see an appreciable time savings over time. But then again most of us do a whole lot of things on pfSense that we don't need on our home networks haha, so have fun!

                                            One home network scenario that probably could benefit a lot from LACP would be a network that does a lot of work with video editing via a NAS. That stuff, especially high resolutions before compression can really suck down some bandwidth. If you are regularly transferring 20-30GB+ files around, an LACP could really help keep your transfer speeds up without tanking the LAN for everyone else.

                                            There is something to be said for cost with LACP too. In the above video editing example you can improve network speeds with a few more GbE ports (cheap) and a couple of Cat5-6 patch cables.
                                            Upgrading to 10GbE, while certainly a faster/better solution requires you to buy at a minimum 1-2x 2-port 10GbE NIC's, plus a 10GbE switch - not cheap!

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