why not just have one router port for the BH and one router port for the
AP? Are you trying to preserve layer 2 access to the AP in the case of
router failure or something?

On Mon, Aug 17, 2015 at 8:07 PM, Jeremy <jeremysmi...@gmail.com> wrote:

> I would say trunk port to the router and then breakout vlans on each port
> in the switch.
>
> On Mon, Aug 17, 2015 at 6:43 PM, TJ Trout <t...@voltbb.com> wrote:
>
>> So say I have a 12port wisp switch and on that site my backhaul is from a
>> airfiber and my access point is a rocket, what is the best/easiest way to
>> setup a vlan to accomplish this?
>>
>> There is two ways I think,
>>
>> Method 1 would use 4 total ports on the wisp switch, 1 for the AF POE out
>> and another to the router WAN, another for the rocket POE and a forth to
>> the lan side of the router, advantage simple setup? Full throughput,
>> disadvantage you take 4 ports.
>>
>> Method 2 would use 3 total ports on the wisp switch, 1 for AF, 1 for
>> rocket and 1 trunk port to the router, the trunk port goes between the
>> switch and router with 2 vlans, VLAN 100 for example would be wan to the AF
>> and VLAN 200 would be lan to the rocket, advantage would be less utilized
>> ports disadvantage would be sharing throughput on the single port (which
>> won't be a problem in my scenario)
>>
>> Could someone give me a few hints on which one is better and maybe a hint
>> so I can try to configure it myself?
>>
>
>


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