Having not Used UniFi, does it do a clean job of this?  …. Switching between 
APs as needed and keeping it all straight MAC table wise?

From: Af [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Lewis Bergman
Sent: Thursday, October 22, 2015 9:41 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [AFMUG] 2 wireless APs on bridged Mikrotik ports


Sorry Ken. I summer you don't have 2 Bethesda in house to set it up in a lab. I 
would think shortening the time is your best bet. Now how short.... No idea. 
ARP traffic is tiny so I can't imagine that causing an issue. Maybe a cpu issue 
on all sides trying to keep up with them?

On Thu, Oct 22, 2015, 8:38 AM Josh Luthman 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:

That was Ken's :)

Josh Luthman
Office: 937-552-2340
Direct: 937-552-2343
1100 Wayne St
Suite 1337
Troy, OH 45373
On Oct 22, 2015 9:37 AM, "Paul McCall" 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:
+1 on Josh’s suggestions

From: Af [mailto:[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>] On Behalf 
Of Josh Luthman
Sent: Thursday, October 22, 2015 9:27 AM
To: [email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>
Subject: Re: [AFMUG] 2 wireless APs on bridged Mikrotik ports


Nope, you already have my suggestion.

Can you try your idea of a 10s timeout?

Josh Luthman
Office: 937-552-2340<tel:937-552-2340>
Direct: 937-552-2343<tel:937-552-2343>
1100 Wayne St
Suite 1337
Troy, OH 45373
On Oct 22, 2015 12:28 AM, "Ken Hohhof" 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:
There are 4 SSIDs.  But customer has each device “join” each SSID.  I expected 
the devices to pick one SSID and stay with it down to 1 bar, but they seem very 
fickle.

Or are you saying make all the SSIDs the same?  I don’t think it matters, there 
are 4 wireless networks, even if they are all named the same.

From: Josh Luthman<mailto:[email protected]>
Sent: Wednesday, October 21, 2015 11:03 PM
To: [email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>
Subject: Re: [AFMUG] 2 wireless APs on bridged Mikrotik ports


Why not do 4 SSIDs?  Add the profiles once and then done.

I think your issue is probably the APs, not the bridge/switch part but it 
doesn't really help.

Josh Luthman
Office: 937-552-2340<tel:937-552-2340>
Direct: 937-552-2343<tel:937-552-2343>
1100 Wayne St
Suite 1337
Troy, OH 45373
On Oct 21, 2015 11:59 PM, "Ken Hohhof" 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:
I have a customer who insisted he needed 2 dual band wireless APs 25 feet apart 
in his ranch house.  So we have a managed non-WiFi Mikrotik RB2011 in his 
basement, feeding two Netgear routers in wireless AP mode.  I have the LAN 
ports bridged rather than using the switch chips, since there's plenty of CPU 
power and it gives more visibility into the traffic.

So counting 2.4 GHz and 5 GHz, the customer has 4 SSIDs and I think his devices 
like iPads are jumping back and forth between networks.  And I think bad things 
are happening because the bridging table can't keep track of which port the 
clients are on.  I see weird things like the same amount of traffic going out 
the ports to both wireless APs.  I never see a MAC address on both bridge 
ports, but it is acting like the Mikrotik is flooding traffic to both ports.

Should I be tweaking parameters like reducing the ageing time below the default 
5 minutes?  Should I be using the switch chips and not bridging?

Is this a typical problem when devices can choose between multiple APs close 
together on the same bridged LAN?

Reply via email to