Smart home devices not working
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@johnpoz I've left out a few details to save some time, My home is 3 stories(Basement, ground and upstairs) The house is over 3,000 sqaure feet and my problem is that its a long house(And a part of the house is brick). I've got 4 routers running as AP's to cover the entire house.
Now, the majority of the smart devices are located on one side of the house. The 5th router(My PfSense Box) runs the side of the house with all the smart devices I am referring to. I decided to use a WiFi Card in the PfSense box insted of a proper AP because I don't use much WiFi on that side of the house; Everything has its own Cat6 cable.
I will go ahead and get a AP to run the smart home devices. Honestly you're right, spending the money is easier and more stable than lighting my server rack on fire trying to get something to work that won't work.
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@exlow said in Smart home devices not working:
I've got 4 routers running as AP's to cover the entire house.
Sounds like a nightmare.
So you have many different routing networks that could be causing your trouble? Turn them into APs if you can, replace them if you cannot, reflash them with AFW if possible. All those routes and NATs and UPnP can cause headaches like what you are describing.
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@johnpoz I should do that. When I installed PfSense I had already been running a mix of routers across my home conneted to one router... the poor Archer A7 was infront of all the other Routers. I never changed them out for something else because well... I've been so busy I've not had time to notice the mess of routers keeping the WiFi running.
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@exlow said in Smart home devices not working:
The house is over 3,000 sqaure feet and my problem is that its a long house(And a part of the house is brick). I've got 4 routers running as AP's to cover the entire house.
You definitely want proper access points. They often also support fast roaming.
As I mentioned, I have a Unifi access point. They have software for managing the access points and it's easy to configure one and have the configuration distributed to all APs. Also, Unifi APs are sold individually or in 5 packs. With the 5 packs it's assumed you'll be using a PoE switch, but the single unit comes with a PoE injector.
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@rcoleman-netgate I've not heard of AFW could you elaborate? You make a good point, I've been running into tons of similar issues. I would like to get some AP's but I don't have the time to set them up right now. I'm planning on doing some upgrades when MetroNet comes online in my area I'll buy some AP's then. We've only got Spectrum right now and I'm not really getting the speeds I pay for among other issues I've got with them.
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@exlow AFW = alternate firmware. There are a number of different firmwares that could be installed on some devices.
https://search.brave.com/search?q=alternate+firmware+wireless -
@jknott I had a 48 port POE Cisco switch I used when I was mining Crypto but a year ago it randomly caught on fire one day... No clue what exactly happened there but now I'm stuck with a 24 port Netgear switch that isn't POE. I'll get another POE switch when I get some AP's I'm glad you told me about the 5 pack, I'll need atleast 5.
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Yeah, crypto mining takes a lot of power.
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@rcoleman-netgate said in Smart home devices not working:
I've got 4 routers running as AP's to cover the entire house.
Your actually using them as AP only.. They support that mode, or you just connecting them to your network via lan port on the device and turning off their dhcp?
If they were all AP that should work ok, but if they are doing nat - yeah that could be very problematic with stuff that should be able to talk to each other not being able too.
My place is less than half your 3000, all 1 floor and I have 3 APs ;) heheh - But then again I don't have any devices that don't have an outstanding signal. And the one in my kitchen is near the patio door so also have great coverage out on my patio, etc.
Multiple floors make it trickier to get great coverage and properly place AP in the ceilings for sure.. Especially if your walls are brick or other issues with walls, etc. I would prob turn off 2.4 if wasn't for these stupid IoT devices that don't support 5ghz.
Guess depends on your priorities - one of mine is not having to ever worry about wifi coverage anywhere in the house. And I don't want stuff at the edge of coverage being flacky our causing problems with the other devices on that same AP.. I have been a fan of the Unifi APs - they support vlans, and quite a few other bells and whistles for wifi. Plus you can run the controller on pretty much anything - I have it running on a vm on my nas. And now I can see exactly what is connected to what AP, their signal, what PHY they are connected at, how much data any specific client is moving.. Wish they would add if device is using wpa2 or wpa3.. Stupid iot devices and no support for wpa3 ;) or enterprise.
The unifi have some very reasonable priced models - you can get newest lite model for like $99 I think.. They can even do wireless uplink, etc. If you need too, but I have all mine wired.. I don't get less than 400mbps on any device that supports that anywhere in the house, etc.
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I won't argue against using a separate AP because that is better in almost every way. But what exactly is the Asus WIFI device you were trying? How was it configured? Did you see any errors in the wireless logs when the IoT devices tried to connect?
I use a wifi interface directly in pfSense for IoT devices. It's even a USB adapter.
Those devices need almost no bandwidth so it's not really a problem in my particular situation.Steve
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@rebekahcraig said in Smart home devices not working:
Though Iโm quite an old person (Iโm 63
Not old my friend.. 57 here.. your not that far ahead of me ;)
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And I'm 69.
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@jknott well that is old ;) hehehe
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But I also have a half century of experience in telecom, computers and networks. My first LAN experience was in early 1978, before IP or Ethernet, and first Ethernet in the mid 80s.
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@jknott Remember Banyon Vines by any chance?
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@jarhead I remember it, but never worked with it. My first LAN experience was on the Air Canada reservation system, which had a proprietary LAN from Rockwell Collins. It used time division multiplexing in a ring. It ran at 8 Mb over triaxial cable and 2 Mb over coax. Each device had a time slot in which it could transmit and the destination device would listen in that time slot. I also remember ARCnet. It was covered in a course I took, but I never worked with it either. On the other hand, I did work with token ring, when I worked at IBM in the late 90s. One other thing I've done, which I doubt anyone else here has, is hand wire an Ethernet controller. I did this on a prototyping board for a Data General Eclipse computer, in 1989. My first Ethernet experience was with 10base5 connecting VAX 11/780 computers, in the mid 80s.
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We may have strayed off-topic.
But my first experience with any sort of computer network was Econet. -
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