Routing will be a problem.
How are you going to tell a router customer .1 is here, .5 is there, etc.?
There are thousands of /26 networks available that are non-routing. What about creating a new /26 out of 10.x.x.x and NAT it until you get everyone moved?

On 9/9/2011 5:34 PM, Bill Prince wrote:

We put up a new AP on a POP where we already have 6 operating APs. The plan is to split off about 25 existing subscribers on one of the old APs and put them on this new AP.

So we have all the subs (about 50) in one /26 (x.y.x.0/26). The ones we're going to move I need to put on a separate subnet, as everything is different, but I don't have enough IPs in a completely different subnet to just move them over at the moment.

Would there be an issue to create a new subnet (x.y.z.32/27), and move all the ones we want on the new AP to this subnet? This would overlap with the old subnet for the short time we're moving everyone.

Then after they're moved, I'll take the old x.y.z.0/26 and change it to x.y.z.0/27.






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Scott Reed
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Wireless Networking
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