We did an install at a 40+ affordable housing project this weekend.
Here's the writeup. It was the first time we'd linked two nodes using
WDS - which tested out well. We also used the Netgate 250mW HS3000
(802.11b only) which combined with its WDS support saved us messing
around with Pebble which was a nice change.

As always, we welcome any questions, suggestions or comments! We love
learning from these projects.

cheers, michael
www.socalfreenet.org

-------- Original Message --------
Subject: Golden Villas Installation Report
Date: Mon, 21 Feb 2005 00:21:34 -0800
From: Michael Mee <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Read about our Golden Villas install yesterday at:
http://socalfreenet.org/goldenvillasinstall. The web page includes
embedded links, pics and formatting that makes it easer to read, but
below is the text version too for reading offline or with small format
devices.

cheers, michael

<snip> - http://socalfreenet.org/goldenvillasinstall

Our intrepid band of volunteers really pulled through today with the
most complex single-day install we’ve ever accomplished!

For starters, there was the common room that become a computer lab. Then
there was the dual node installation of a main AP and a second rooftop
repeater AP. These were all driven by a newly installed router, firewall
and captive portal box (a soekris box running m0n0wall). Many, many
thanks to all of you, both the regulars and the newcomers. With one less
person, it would have been hard to finish in one day.

Things that went well
 We’ve learnt a lot in the past year and are applying it more
consistently. In particular, we’ve found that the more work we can do
before getting onsite, the smoother the day will go. This allows more
time to cope with the unexpected.

Some specific things we’ve learnt previously and applied well this time:

a solid site survey with the intended installation equipment, including
antennas. This meant we didn’t have to do any testing or relocation of
gear on the day.
timely purchase and assembly of all the equipment — physically
assembling all the gear beforehand eliminates surprises like: missing
small but critical components (zip ties, sealant goop) and catches
problems like incompatible mounting hardware (though see below)
network planning — we designed and fully documented the network layout,
including all equipment interface IP assignment, subnets etc. We’ve
always done the design before, but never documented it so well (still
room to improve)
preconfigure settings and end-to-end test, and document it — this was
probably the first hard learnt lesson and we’ve taken it to heart,
though this was the first time we’d documented it. Each piece of gear
was configured according to the network plan and documented as we went
(gateway router, HS3000 AP). Then, and this is the crucial step, it was
all hooked together and connected to a live internet feed. However even
this wasn’t a perfect test, see below.

project planning — Also for the first time we put together a planning
document. This was the largest install by far that we’ve ever attempted
in one day. We usually do one node, period. This was two nodes and a
lab. So we decided to split out the tasks and divvy up responsibilities
ahead of time. This allowed some of the work to be frontloaded before
the day and also allowed tasks to proceed in parallel on the day. We
have more work to do on this approach, but it was a promising start.
start early — 10am was on the early side for an install day, but with
the ambitious schedule we planned, it was a good move.

standard gear — for a while we’ve tried to find a standard set of gear
and stick to it. This simplifies ordering and stocking (e.g. we always
use 48” LMR 400 N-male to N-male cables and hence N-connectors on all
radios). Although we used new radios this time and a new relay approach
(WDS), the rest of the install followed a familiar pattern: SBC m0n0wall
based gateway/router, PoE powered rooftop gear, lightning protector and
8 gauge copper ground to a solid ground rod or equivalent, our usual
Superpass omni downtilt antenna and small stuff like UV-rated zip ties,
hose clamps for mounting, duct goop for waterproofing etc.
volunteers rule — Last but not least, our many skilled volunteers made
the day the great success it was. Given how we’re structured and our
educational emphasis, we often don’t know until the day exactly who will
turn up apart from the core team. However it never fails (so far!) that
everyone who does show up brings some vital piece of gear or some
special skill that makes a unique contribution to the day.
 Many, many thanks to the volunteers who showed up on the day and who
provided critical support beforehand, including: Seren, Drew, Jason,
Michael, Dave, Dlan, Stewart, Marc, Joe, Ben, Matt and Mike S. Not to
forget our president Lee, who also wrote a wonderful thank you. All your
contributions were vital.

Things we learnt
Although all’s well that ended well, there were some ‘learning
opportunities’ during the day. The reason for mentioning them here is
not to dwell on them, but rather to make note so we can avoid these
problems in the future if possible.

always put all the gear together before getting on site - in this case
the 1” mounting poles didn’t fit securely in the 1” mounting brackets
leading to a last minute scramble to find an appropriate mounting
solution. Fortunately we’ve learnt this lesson already with the
electronics, and all of that worked great, with no onsite configuration
necessary.

Double check the configuration as applied - for the first time we
completely documened the planned network IP layout, but the gateway WLAN
IP was erroneously set to the base network address of 10.12.11.128
instead of the first IP value of 10.12.11.129. Strangely, this worked
during testing and also for the laptops we tried which were running
WinXP, but not for the lab computers rnning Win2k. (The symptom was DNS
not working).
Plan on making an extra trip to Home Depot - the best laid plans oft go
awry. Ideally a trip offsite to get odds and ends won’t be necessary,
but better to plan for one anyway and then be thankful if you don’t need
to go.
Equipment Used

Used for Name & Link Approx Price Qty
Gateway Soekris 4501 $206 1
 8MB CF card, cables $15 1
Radios HS3000 $320 2
Antennas downtilt 8dBi $65 2
 lightning protector $20 2
Cables 1.5M N-Male N-Male $18 2
Masts 1” aluminum offcuts $5 2
Misc Mounting hardware, electrical hardware ~$50 1
Volunteers Pizza Lunch $50 1

a work in progress - the final tally is still being worked out

</snip>

Links from above article:
Site survey: http://socalfreenet.org/node/392
Network config: http://socalfreenet.org/node/406
Gateway config: http://socalfreenet.org/node/408
AP config (including WDS): http://socalfreenet.org/node/409
Project plan: http://socalfreenet.org/node/398




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