You can tunnel port 2s and tunnel port 3s and run two eoip tunnels. On May 3, 2017 12:18 AM, "Dan Harling via Mikrotik-users" < [email protected]> wrote:
> On Tue, May 2, 2017 at 9:06 PM, Blair Davis via Mikrotik-users > <[email protected]> wrote: > > I have a small network I need to modify > > > > There are three locations, each with a RB433GL on site. > > > > Port one of each RB433GL is linked to port one of the other two > > RB433GL's via a wireless bridge. > > > > Port two and three each go off to a separate local LAN at each location, > > giving me six little LAN's that can route traffic among themselves. > > > > My client now wants to convert from six little LAN's to two bigger LAN's. > > > > He wants port two of each RB433GL to be part of one flat LAN and port > > three of each RB433GL to be part of a different flat LAN. > > On each board: two VLANs on the ether1 interface, bridged to ether2 & > ether3 respectively. > > Be sure that your client understands that this new topology will 1) > cause the wireless bridge to start carrying broadcast packets for both > LANs between all three RB433GLs, and 2) count on the bridge devices' > STP algorithm to prevent packet storms. Both are reasons that routed > networks are usually preferable, unless a single broadcast domain is > absolutely necessary for a particular application. > > Daniel Harling <>< > Engineering, Cape Ann Communications > 183 Main Street, Gloucester, MA 01930 > [email protected] > _______________________________________________ > 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
