This is what we do. Except we drop a /22 at every tower On Dec 24, 2016 2:22 PM, "Mike Francis via Mikrotik-users" < [email protected]> wrote:
I've done a lot of these. Here is an easy plan. Put this in a spreadsheet or notepad. Assign a /24 for loopbacks. Break this into /32s which are single ips. Each router gets a loopback ip. Break up a /24 into /29s for all your backhauls. Assign a /29 for every link between towers/pops/etc. Assign a /20 to each tower/pop. Break it into /24s for each AP. Use ospf. -- John Michael Francis II JMF Solutions, Inc Wavefly - Internet Voip Cloud INC 5000 #2593 CRN Fast Growth #105 251-517-5069 <(251)%20517-5069> http://jmfsolutions.net http://wavefly.com On December 24, 2016 1:45:56 PM CST, OWS Optimum Wireless via Mikrotik-users <[email protected]> wrote: > Hello. > > I need guidance on how to route our WISP network. We currently have almost > 300 customers on 10 towers, bridging all these towers, all cpe are routed > and the authentication is done by ip address on the core router (rb3011). > > I'm looking to route the network and in the future do some sort of > failover. Now, don't know what exactly to do since our authentication is by > IP and not by PPoE. > > Our network is on 172.16.0.0/16 and customer's IP 172.16.100.0/16 and > over. I probably need to change addresses or authentication, but rather do > it now than later. > > What you guys recommend me to do or read in order for us to go on the > right track. > > Your time and help is appreciated. > > Thanks and Happy Holidays! > > ------------------------------ > > Mikrotik-users mailing list > [email protected] > http://lists.wispa.org/mailman/listinfo/mikrotik-users > > _______________________________________________ Mikrotik-users mailing list [email protected] http://lists.wispa.org/mailman/listinfo/mikrotik-users
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