Which kind of events trigger a succesful switchover to Mesh?
Let me introduce a few failure scenarios here, supposing I have an Omada Mesh network properly set up as fallback, but not yet actually being used as a backhaul because the wired uplinks are working up until this incident time T where one of the described failure modes occur. Which events follow this incident?
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The EAPs are PoE-powered by a single cable acting as the sole uplink and the switch goes down partially: a mistyped ACL is put in place impeding cross L2 traffic (usually named L3 ) however there are other APs not affected by this ACL in the same L2 domain and/or or in a different L3 domain.
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Chatter continues on wired L2 if some EAP has some other form of uplink.
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EAPs switch to wireless mesh and the ACL is effectively circumvented.
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Mesh continues through wired fabric (I'm not sure if this is a supported operation mode) if the unaffected EAPs are in the same L2 domain.
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This situation was not predicted and connectivity isn’t attainable anymore.
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The EAPs are PoE-powered by the PoE injector but the uplink switch goes down completely:
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EAPs switch to wireless mesh as long as one of the participants has a form of uplink.
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This situation was not predicted and connectivity isn’t attainable anymore.
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The EAPs are PoE-powered by the supplied PoE injector where the connected mains are not protected by any kind of UPS solution, bringing PoE supply down with it when a blackout happens. All EAPs, though, are connected to a capable and ready to run uplink with 802.3af/at ports, so they stop for a brief while but come back up again in a few seconds. The OC200 may or may not be connected and powered to and by this same switch.
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The wireless mesh is reestablished in a few moments even without help from the OC200.
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The wireless mesh is reestablished if, and only if, the OC200 is reachable through some EAP the whole time.
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Mesh connectivity must wait for the OC200 to come back up.
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This situation was not predicted and connectivity isn’t attainable anymore.
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Of course, "none of the above and here's why your understanding is so stupendously wrong that I don’t even know where to start explaining basic netmasks to a baboon" is always a valid answer.
Cheers!