It sounds like you have 10 PPP circuits to your remote sites, each
currently a T1.  You're replacing the T1s with Ethernet circuits.  

Just replace this:
>Main Site (172.20.x.x) ------ T1 Wan link (192.168.x.x) ------ Remote
Site
>(172.21.x.x)

With this: 
>Main Site (172.20.x.x) ------ Ethernet "Wan" link (192.168.x.x) ------
Remote Site
>(172.21.x.x)

Your broadcast and collision domains would remain separate, just like
they are now.

Unless your existing routers have the Ethernet port to handle the new
Ethernet "Wan", you'd have to do your routing with the L3 switches
anyway, so why not dump the routers and have just one piece of network
gear at each remote site to manage.


How would this work without routing?  How's traffic on 172.20.x.x get to
172.21.x.x, since those are separate subnets?

>When setting up the Fiber, because layer 2, I do NOT have to have a
>seperate network for that WAN link anymore.  I can set it up like:
>Main Site (172.20.x.x) ------ Fiber Link ------- Remote Site
(172.21.x.x)





-----Original Message-----
From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] 
Sent: Thursday, May 13, 2010 2:42 PM
To: NT System Admin Issues
Subject: Network/WAN question


Hello.  Looking for input on our current/proposed network.

We have 10 sites.  Each site is connected via T1 lines.  There is a
router
at each site that handles the routing.

We are replacing the T1 lines with fiber.  The company leasing us the
fiber
is handing off an ethernet port at each site (all layer 2).

My question is... Our current WAN setup with the T1s looks like this:

Main Site (172.20.x.x) ------ T1 Wan link (192.168.x.x) ------ Remote
Site
(172.21.x.x)

The WAN link itself is on it's own network.

When setting up the Fiber, because layer 2, I do NOT have to have a
seperate network for that WAN link anymore.  I can set it up like:
Main Site (172.20.x.x) ------ Fiber Link ------- Remote Site
(172.21.x.x)

The downside with this is, broadcasts would still travel over the Fiber
link since the WAN link is not on a seperate network. It does however,
simplify things for me a bit.

The question is, which of the two methods would you use?   Putting the
Fiber WAN link on it's own network or, not?

One other question.  Since my HP switches at the main/remote sites are
able
to do IP Routing, would you also remove the routers (which are needed
with
the current T1 WAN links) completly from the enviroment and do all
routing
at the switch level?  I'm leaning towards doing this and ditching the
routers.

Thanks.
J




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