PfSense network topology question
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We are planning on going all wireless. Having one server running pfsense and a switch (not cisco grade), and wireless routers would connect to a GE switch and act as APs probably. This would be the network of a dormitory with ~170 people. We think 10 routers would be enough for 50 rooms each having 3-4 people. What do you guys think? The budget is unknown. they told us to plan it and they will see. I think the routers would be TP-Link TL-WR1043ND.
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so you would buy wifi routers to use for AP.. When your going to have 170 people?? WTF???
Get REAL AP, with REAL controller..
And does not cisco grade me like a dumb switch, not managed? Dude those wifi routes are not even 5ghz??
I would be looking a POE switch and real AP to setup such a network..
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I've had great success with e2000 linksys with DDWRT using all 5 ports including the WAN, as LAN switch with wireless also.
I do agree with other's comments though - For so many people I would get a serious switch and a serious AP.
DDWRT doesn't make the best use of the hardware's ability where wireless is concerned.
It works, but not as well as a good dedicated AP that hasn't been tampered with would work.
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People sweat the strangest shit.
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We are planning on going all wireless. Having one server running pfsense and a switch (not cisco grade), and wireless routers would connect to a GE switch and act as APs probably. This would be the network of a dormitory with ~170 people. We think 10 routers would be enough for 50 rooms each having 3-4 people. What do you guys think? The budget is unknown. they told us to plan it and they will see. I think the routers would be TP-Link TL-WR1043ND.
You only need one router. You probably need about 10 access points. Maybe a couple more. Depends on the building construction and your flexibility in radio placement.
In that situation you can use just about any AP. Your problem is going to be coverage, noise, and signal strength, not density of clients. In a dorm/apartment/hotel scenario, you can't get enough clients connected to a decent AP to stress it (compared to, say, a stadium or a ballroom full of people).
Look at Ubiquiti. UAP-ACs (or UAP-PROs) will be more than good enough. In fact, with a bunch of walls between your APs, You might even be able to get 4 (or even 8) channels together in a reasonable manner and actually take advantage of AC.
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"People sweat the strangest shit."
Depends on budget usually and application. I use DDWRT for small home purposes only.
Its definitely not an industrial strength solution.
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I did some research about the mentioned UAP-AC and other APs and just wow… Amazing performance, specs etc. They claim that this AP can support 200+ users(if that is what concurring user means) at a time (if i read this correclty http://dl.ubnt.com/datasheets/unifi/UniFi_AP_DS.pdf). The building is a 90m long and is a two storey building with 50 dorm rooms and some other rooms. With these specs one UAP-AC would be enough but wouldn't that limit the bandwidth of one user (if we assume all people are on the network at one time) to 450 Mbps / 170 people = 2.65 Mbps? Because that is very low. This is of course when looking at the 2.4 GHz spectrum. Since we have a gigabit connection our theoretical maximum is somewhere around 0.75 MBps. I know we can not exceed this limit, when everybody is on the network. However i believe if we had only one router it would be under heavy load. I think 5 APs would be enought (tell me if not) to cover the whole building (not because of the range, these babys support up to 120m each) decently. The final setup would be something like Internet -> pfSense server -> 8 port GE switch -> POE adapters -> APs. Is this viable, what do you guys think? I need to plan this good because these cost 300 USD a piece.
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If it were me i would stay away from PoE injectors, makes for a messy install. First your switch something like this will do: http://www.amazon.com/NETGEAR-ProSAFE-M4100-D10-POE-Ethernet-Managed/dp/B00AUEYX0Y/ref=sr_1_7?ie=UTF8&qid=1423997096&sr=8-7&keywords=poe+switch although me myself I would use this : http://www.ebay.com/itm/HP-Procurve-Switch-J8762A-2600-8-PWR-8-PORT-PoE-10-100-1x-Gigabit-Mini-GBIC-/171667808257?pt=LH_DefaultDomain_0&hash=item27f832e001
as far as the access point I have this one and it works quite well : http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16833168150 But choose what ever you like.
Wireless can be a little tricky so you have to do your homework. What you need is a site survey, So if you have a android phone get a app called "wifinder" and install it on your android phone. Then get a dual band Wi-Fi router and plug it in on your top floor and then wall around the floor and see how your signal is, if anywhere it falls down to 1 or 2 bars then I would mark the ceiling with a sticker or something indicating that a access point is needed there. If you are all good then go down the next floor and repeat the steps. You want to have a 10% - 15% overlap of your Wi-Fi signal that way your users will never drop a connection (If you name your SSIDs the same across APs)
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I would like to know that can i use a poe switch with just regular devices? I think yes, but just wanted to make sure. I looked at the items you linked. They are good, but I can't just by them on ebay, they have to be sourced publicly. This network architecture has to be good for at least 5 years, that is why I think I will need the ac support and 5 GHz support.
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If you want to take benefit of POE you need devices which is POE enabled. A POE switch can be used for none-POE devices but remember to disable POE on the ports in question.
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I get it now, thank you.
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Agree unifi would be low cost solution here..
As to density of clients.. I would think you would stress the shit out of hom router device.. Everyone with their phones, and tablets and game consoles, etc.. Those 170 people are clearly going to have more than 1 wifi device..
Those home routers are not even designed for mounting or good coverage. They are designed to sit on your desk in a room in your house and give a very shitty area shitty coverage ;)
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Good. Then I will start looking around for APs like the ones mentioned before (Unifi, EnGenius) plus a POE+ switch. Yes, the clients all have multiple devices. That is why I am not sure about the number of APs. If we count all devices, that is about 340 device. That is a LOT!
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Thats a lot of APs potentially a lot of band crowding.
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Yes, so is there a magic formula to determine the require number of APs for a network with given number of users or devices?
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No there is no "magic" anything.. Taking a look at the layout and composition of building, what type of performance you want to provide along with number of devices and density of devices you determine number and location of the AP.
This may need tweaking once network goes live with either addition, movement or settings for minrssi, etc. to provide best network for all users.
Do a POC, get 1 or a few of the AP your interested in and test their performance in your real world setup is what I would suggest. Maybe even get a few different ones by brand or model, etc.
Do you have any sort of real number of wifi devices to work with that have connected to your current network? Do you have a listing of mac addresses? Do you have users register their device to be able to get on? Or we just taking a guess to number and type of devices that will be using the wifi?
So your not going to provide any sort of wire to the room? This can take a load of your wifi if you allow users to say plug in some of their devices like laptops or pcs, etc.
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I think you can get maximum density by using more APs at lower power settings.
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@mir:
If you want to take benefit of POE you need devices which is POE enabled. A POE switch can be used for none-POE devices but remember to disable POE on the ports in question.
You don't have to disable the PoE on a switch to hook it up to non PoE devices. Please do some homework before you get started with this job or just hire someone with some experience or you will be spending more money to have them fix what you put in. The way PoE not "Some Power Injectors" work is that the device request for power If my memory serves me correctly it is via a signal that if not reflected back to the switch will tell it to not to send power to the device (I might have that reversed, look it up). PoE is designed to be compatible with non-PoE devices, regardless of polarity but again I would caution do some homework. If I were you not to be discouraging but I would get some students from the computer science department to come over and take care of the job. Wireless can be tricky and like I said previously, and I think Johnpoz has mentioned you need to do some research first. Since you will be pulling wire like Johnpoz has mentioned why not put a data drop in every dorm room that way your are covered for the future. It goes with out saying, but it sound like you are just starting out in this IT infrastructure stuff but when you pull wire either for the APs and/or the dorm rooms make sure that you label each drop and punch them down onto a punch down block (Patch Panel) hopefully in a closet some where, where you have security (a door with a lock).
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You are not going to cover that space with one access point. Absolutely no way. If you have acceptable coverage more than two or three rooms away and possibly from floor to floor directly above and below I would be surprised.
Many pros use Fluke AirMagnet to do their surveys. It's too expensive for only one job like this. I bought a Mac app called NetSpot. It allows you to upload a map or drawing of your space and walk around clicking where you're standing. It will do passive (listening to the signal) or active (transmitting data and taking other metrics) surveys and you end up with what's known as a heat map. Even the free version will probably do what you need (no active surveys and a 50 sample limit on surveys plus some other limitations in the data available I think.)
You should really look at signal-to-noise ratio (in a high-noise environment you need more signal for the same throughput) but if you just look at the dBm and plan for nowhere in your space being lower than about -67 in the 5GHz band, you should be fine. 2.4GHz penetrates construction better so if you plan for 5 you'll be good on 2.4.
Use that to determine placement of your APs and the number needed.
Yes, use PoE switches. Make sure you buy a good switch and buy APs that accept standard PoE or PoE+. I have some of the bigger Ruckus APs and it's hit or miss if my little Cisco SF302P on my bench will power them, even though the Cisco says it meets the PoE+ specs (802.3at). The Brocade 6430Ps and 6450Ps power them every time.
Also, if you don't NEED AC, don't BUY AC. You have to stack 4 or 8 channels together to get the extra throughput. You will be limited to using 20Mhz channels on 2.4Ghz (channels 1, 6, and 11) and maybe 40Mhz channels on 5Ghz.
You'll need to set the channels ensuring that the 2.4 channels are spaced as far away from each other as possible. You can only do so much with only 3.
1 11 6 1 6 1 11
etc.
Lock your channels down and turn off auto.
In this environment you might or might not be better lowering power. Probably not to minimize the number of APs needed.
Note also that your AP placement should minimize the angles of penetration through walls as much as possible. A piece of drywall can look like it's 6 inches thick to a radio wave if it's at a steep angle.
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You don't have to disable the PoE on a switch to hook it up to non PoE devices.
That depends on whether you want wired users to be able to pull PoE if they ask for it.
Many PoE switches support power on every port but only have a power budget for a subset of ports at once. In that situation if you were using the same switch for your APs and some public wired locations, it would probably be sound design to disable PoE on the wired ports. Usually really easy to do with something like int eth 1/1/1 to 1/1/12; no inline power.
Get a good switch.