Hi Nick..

Just to clarify, what should work fine? The original idea or the edit? :)

Please excuse my ignorance, I am rather new to this field..

Why is the broadcast traffic over my WAN link a downside?

Isn't the point of broadcast traffic to advertise or locate network resources?

Thank You,
Michael



From: Nick Allen [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: Wednesday, May 23, 2012 2:42 PM
To: Enterasys Customer Mailing List
Subject: Re: [enterasys] B3 Routing between VLANs

Makes sense to me Mike and should work fine.
A downside is that any broadcast traffic at your remote site will also be 
broadcast over your WAN link.

Hugo's solution - which creates a VLAN solely for the point-to-point link (a 
transit VLAN) but which requires L3 capable devices at both ends would contain 
those broadcasts within the local VLAN's at each site.

On all our point-to-point links, we use a subnet with a mask of 255.255.255.248 
(/29) which gives you 6 useable IP's on that VLAN. It's tempting to be frugal 
and go for a 255.255.255.252 (/30) which only gives you 2 useable (one for each 
end), but if you ever add WAN optimisation devices, then it may require an IP 
in that subnet.

N.

On Wed, May 23, 2012 at 9:55 PM, Michael Paul 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:

Hi Hugo..

Thank you for the information.

Your post reminded me that I forgot to include something important in my 
question.

On the Main office side I have the B3 switch and a Cisco ASA-5510.

On the remote location side I have a Cisco 2921 and a Cisco ASA-5505. I have no 
L3 switch at the remote location.

My idea was to set up one of the Cisco 2921 ports to connect to the WAN link 
and set up the VLAN and routing between the 2 locations on the B3 switch 
located here in the main office.

Essentially, I want the B3 to "see" the WAN connection as just another VLAN 
Ethernet connection. Setting up the routing in the B3 will join the 2 networks 
as if they were one.

Since the remote location internet connection will now be routed through the 
main office, I no longer need to worry about firewalls, internet routing, etc 
at the remote site.

Does that make sense?

Edit: I just realized that I may not even need to use the 2921. The supplier of 
the WAN link has told me that the link will be an untagged VLAN. Since the 3Com 
L2 switches at the remote location support VLANs, all I would really need to do 
would be to connect the WAN connection to a switch at the remote location and 
configure the port for the VLAN. Then configure the port on the B3 for the VLAN 
and then routing between the 2 VLANs and then both VLANs should be able to 
freely communicate. Does this make more sense?

Thank You,
Michael

From: [email protected]<mailto:[email protected]> 
[mailto:[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>] On Behalf Of Hugo 
Veiga
Sent: Wednesday, May 23, 2012 1:14 PM
To: Enterasys Customer Mailing List
Subject: Re: [enterasys] B3 Routing between VLANs

Hi,


Let's say for example that you have a enterasys core, this will work with any 
other equipment that is L3 capable.

And this is the logical topology:

Enterasys Core "fe.1.1" ----------------------300 mile (untagged 
frames)----------------------"fe.1.1" B3

Let's say that you have the IP's 192.168.0.0/16<http://192.168.0.0/16> in the B3


You should do P2P routing between your core and the B3.

So in the core you create a vlan 1000 and put it untagged in the port that 
connects to the operator.

In the core:
Set port vlan fe.1.1 1000  modify-egress
interface vlan 1000
ip address 10.0.0.1 255.255.255.248
no shutdown
Create a route like this:
Route 192.168.0.0 255.255.0.0 10.0.0.2

In the B3:
Set port vlan fe.1.1 1000  modify-egress
Create the same vlan:
Interface vlan 1000
Ip address 10.0.0.2 255.255.255.248
No shutdown
Create a route like this:
Route 0.0.0.0 0.0.0.0 10.0.0.1

Create all the other vlans you want in the B3 and create the interface vlan for 
them, the gateway for the computers.

This should do the trick.


Best regards,
Hugo Veiga



2012/5/23 <[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>>
Hi,

I have not used a B3... but usually, you go into router mode, configure
vlan interfaces, assign them IPs, don't forget "no shutdown", etc.

Or what are the specific problems that you are expecting with your setup?

On 23-May-12 18:45, Michael Paul wrote:
>
> I have a B3 switch that I need to enable routing between VLANs.
>


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