Loss of segment
Loss of segment
Hi all
I have an issue with part of my network dropping and not recovering if power is lost to my TL-SG2008P Switch.
My main network runs all OK, but I have an extended network which branches off using two EAP225 Outdoor antennas facing each other as a link. At the far side of my link I have a TL-SG2008P Switch, which powers up my EAP225 outdoor antenna and a EAP620 HD for coverage in that area. Both antennas are powered via the PoE+ ports on the switch.
If power is lost to the switch, the two antennas also power off, but when power is restored, the link between the two EAP225 Outdoor antennas don't restore, even though the RSL of the antennas are very good, at around -48.
Both my antennas have a static IP assigned to them.
Is there something I am not doing correctly like a configuration issue for this to happen, or is this always to be?
I would appreciate any assistance on my issue.
Many thanks.
Colin
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The segment which is on the 2008P is my home which is separate from the business address. I have three ssid's on my EAP620. One is for my son. ( Parental filters applied) One is for my general home use and one is for me to work from home which is tagged. All are on separate vlan's and ssid's
Thanks again
Colin.
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Okay, I have 3 SSIDs on my remote AP too, each with their own VLAN/subnet. I treat the connection between the outdoor and indoor like an unmanaged switch (which is what you did when you Forgot your switch). You should be able to replicated that by removing all Port Profiles on the 2008. Your 620? AP will still tag traffic from each SSID, and because of the L2 nature of a switch, it will stuff those tagged packets into the ethernet port of the 225 which will duly punt them across the wireless link to the wired 225 which delivers them to the managed port of your local switch (at which point you can deal with VLAN isolation etc.). I think you're very close to a workable solution. At the very worst, you should be able to isolate two of your remote 2008P ports and restrict forwarding between them, so Isolate 3, forward only 4, Isolate 4, forward only 3. This should keep them away from the managed portion of the switch and whatever that does to your setup that's breaking things...but mostly I suspect you are tagging packets on the AP ports when what you only need is a single untagged VLAN between them. Make sense?
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That makes sense. I'll have to draw everything down on a sketchpad and try and make sense of it better that way. A job for tomorrow now I think.
Thanks very much.
Colin.
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I see there is a new firmware available for the EAP225- Outdoor which has fixed my issue. It enables me now to select the preferred access point to the EAP225-Outdoor at the remote end, so when my switch fails and everything reboots, it picks up the RF link not the switch as the network.
I don't know wether this was your input into this, but it has worked.
I can now keep my SG2008P managed and my remote EAP225 powered from the PoE of the switch.
Thanks 👍
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