​
Do y’all have one vlan per building?

We have four wireless vlan zones (North, South, East, West).

Do you allow roaming over entire campus, per building or what?

The buildings in each zone are strategically chosen to avoid roaming
problems... we don't have much outdoor coverage, so it would be hard to
roam between the zones anyway. North and South are academic/administrative
buildings, East and West are residential.


How large are youf DHCP pools? What is the pool expiration time?


We use /21s with 8 day leases. However, it works out such that the vlans in
each zone rarely have more active devices than you would with a /24. The
larger address space and longer leases are so that clients generally have
persistent IP addresses in each zone over time, even if they aren't
actively using a lease. We do NAT everything, so maintaining address space
for 4x our regular population isn't a problem.



How do y’all find these abusers?


We don't require any authentication to the wireless network. We want to be
as welcoming to guests (especially alumni and admissions candidates) as
possible. However, we do still track use based on IP only (hence the need
for longer, persistent leases). This is a kind of double-blind strategy to
avoid charges of favoritism in enforcement. Abuse is monitored at the
internet gateway, using a product called Untangle NGFW. I can't say enough
good things about that product, though we're a very small institution and
it might not scale up for many others on this list. If/when abuse is
detected, an enforcement determination is then made by the student
development office... not by IT.


Only after the enforcement determination is made will we cross reference
the IP/mac across all four zones, and force all four IPs to a captive
portal page on the NGFW that requires authentication. We also convert the
leases to reservations, and move the macs to a policy group in the policy
trees such that internet service is highly degraded if the user chooses to
attempt something like setting a static IP, but will operate normally if we
have a username associated with it. This process isn't as much work as it
sounds like.


The whole scheme was created initially because we haven't long had the
ability to do vlan pools. We had to use zones to avoid everyone being in
one big vlan, and each zone had exactly one vlan. We keep the scheme
because it allows some natural isolation of residential traffic from the
rest of the network.

  Joel Coehoorn
Director of Information Technology
402.363.5603
*[email protected] <[email protected]>*

 The mission of York College is to transform lives through
Christ-centered education and to equip students for lifelong service to
God, family, and society

On Tue, May 5, 2015 at 10:19 AM, Legge, Jeffry <[email protected]> wrote:

>  Currently we allow roaming over our entire campus. Some buildings have
> their own vlan while others do not. Each year we have more devices and thus
> our DHCP pools are stressed. We are looking at changing our network design
> and giving each building their own vlan and larger DHCP pools. We currently
> have a class B IPV4 internet addresses and will move to NAT. When students
> are abusing copyright etc. we are given an IP address and asked to
> determine who is doing the abusing. As students roam they could end up with
> multiple IP addresses and Natting will complicate the ability to find these
> abusers  I am curious about the following.
>
>
>
> ​​
> Do y’all have one vlan per building?
>
>
>
> How large are you DHCP pools?
>
>
>
> What is the pool expiration time?
>
>
>
> Do you allow roaming over entire campus, per building or what?
>
>
>
> How do y’all find these abusers?
>
>
>
> Any thoughts will be appreciated.
>
>
>
> -Jeff Legge
>
> Radford University
>
> 540-250-5224
>
>
>
>
>  ********** Participation and subscription information for this EDUCAUSE
> Constituent Group discussion list can be found at
> http://www.educause.edu/groups/.
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>

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