controller oc200
hi, I have an omada system consisting of an oc200 controller, 7 eap245 and 2 TL SG1008mp switches
so connected:
modem -> direct cable on switch -----> eap245 and oc200 controller
all working, I was wondering how to set a static ip, sub mask and gateway on the controller?
thanks
oc200:
Controller Name: Omada Controller_5FF2B1
MAC Address: B0-**-**-**-E2-0A
System Time: Jul 18, 202203:10:28 pm
Uptime: 3day(s) 6h 51m 34s
Controller Version: 5.4.7
Model: OC200 1.0
Firmware Version: 1.18.3 Build 20220715 Rel.56221
------------------
EAP245 v. 5.0.6
-----------------
switch poe TL SG1008mp
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Hi, here is how you do what you asked (ie Settings->Controller), but I'd advise against this approach:
Instead I suggest you create a Reserved IP on your router for the OC200 so it is always provisioned with the same IP via DHCP.
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Hello,
thanks, I tried this but it doesn't work.
however it does not have internet access (modem), furthermore the eap245s are not updated.
thanks
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Hello,
I correct myself, she worked.
surely in the previous tests I was wrong something.
just now how do i connect the eap245?
gives me this screen:
last question: I can't receive the confirmation email for cloud activation, what should I do?
thank you
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Try factory resetting one of the APs and re-adopting it from scratch.
If that doesn't work, check the Devices tab on your OC200 web interface, and forget all the AP devices you find there (previously adopted)...then re-adopt.
Since you're using a 3rd party router to hand out IP's you need to make sure you only define IP's in the 192.168.1.x/24 subnet on your controller. Do not enable VLANs.
For the best possible solution, it would be ideal if you could add an ER605 and some managed switches (ie SG2xxx or SG3xxx not the SG1xxx)...because right now, you have no control over subnets or VLANs with the OC200. Really the only benefit you would get is seamless roaming support.
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Hello,
I apologize for the delay, however I managed to solve starting from the beginning, resetting everything.
new modem router everything is rebooted.
thanks,
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@d0ugmac1 Bad Idea...
If you use the router to set a static IP (or any DHCP address) for the controller, then when you need to replace your router, your stuffed...
Everything on my network has a dynamic/static DHCP reservation on the router _except_ the controller which has a static IP. If (when) the network fails in some new way, I can always access the controller by plugging a laptop directly into the controller and accessing it via its static IP.
If you can't find the controllers IP for any reason, you can't do anything....
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Your feedback is appreciated, however, I think you misunderstood the point of having a 'fall back IP' as built into all Omada devices. Those IP/netmasks are used by the device (router/switch/AP) in exactly the case you describe. So, if my router goes La-La and I lose DHCP, I can power cycle my OC200 and reach it at the Fallback IP by setting my laptop on the same subnet. So there's really no harm/no difference in using a reserved DHCP (vs statically configuring) IP address for any system device, well, except the router itself :)
In fact, you could probably configure the Fallback IP to be the same IP/subnet as you have reserved in your router's DHCP table. Best of both worlds then.
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