You asked for it lolshare some pics sometime if you are so inclined
You asked for it lolshare some pics sometime if you are so inclined
Wow, I am surprised at this "extra mile" approach here with the NAT for DNS to hide the true DNS server address. I just gave the DNS server a presence on each VLAN with firewall rules on the host permitting only port 53.For the DMZ and CAM networks (which have their gateways on the VyOS router), I also assign an additional interface per network (.253, I've always liked high IPs as gateways -- .254) via DHCP for DNS. NAT rules translate that .253 address to the internal Pi-hole/AdGuard instance IP, with corresponding firewall rules allowing DNS traffic. Also have Client Isolation enacted for that Guest SSID on the Aruba APs.
This design allows guest and camera traffic to be filtered without exposing internal IPs—clients just see what appears to be a local DNS server within their subnet.
Cool. My R720 covers my whole (small) house without issues. If you ever get another Ruckus, you could use the 750 as a master.The plot thickens....I got my hands on a Ruckus R750 AP today. This weekend I am going to swap out my Aruba AP22 and see if I notice any difference in the "fringe" areas of our house.
Nice! I had that era Dell for ages, 12th gen was solid. Beyond that forever and a day Lifecycle Controller initialization. I had a T320 pretty maxed out.
Never worked with Ruckus APs but have heard them mentioned a lot. Hope you have a nice time and they work well. Have only personally used old Aironets, Meraki, UniFi, Aruba Instant On and regular Aruba.The plot thickens....I got my hands on a Ruckus R750 AP today. This weekend I am going to swap out my Aruba AP22 and see if I notice any difference in the "fringe" areas of our house.
I like that size rack. How do you like the Brocade switches?I did a home networking project this weekend also. I got tired of having my fiber ONT and firewall in one area, my NAS in another, and 4 different switches scattered throughout the house. I got this 16U rack and a new old stock Brocade 48 port POE switch, wall mounted it in a seldom used area of our basement, ran power, and have started moving things to the new location. I got far enough to get the internet back on before the rest of the family returned from a shopping trip, but I still have a lot of wire to pull to connect the WAPs and cameras (and eliminate the other switches).
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I have an ICX7250 in my picture above. Brocade is solid and easy to work with. Just about any transreceiver works with them.I like that size rack. How do you like the Brocade switches?
I'll upgrade to a 740 at some point, but so far it has been very reliable.Nice! I had that era Dell for ages, 12th gen was solid. Beyond that forever and a day Lifecycle Controller initialization. I had a T320 pretty maxed out.
The build quality seems really good. I am not familiar with the commands for the CLI, so I had to get some help from AI to get POE enabled for some of the ports.I like that size rack. How do you like the Brocade switches?
Thats great, yeah enterprise APs just rock. I would assume you'll see even better performance once your old AP/wireless router is taken out of the equation.The R750 is alive. Wow - this thing is putting a strong signal throughout my house. I set it up with a new SSID so I could switch back and forth with my existing setup. It appears that I may be able to get away with 1 or two less AP’s in the house.