ML
    • Recent
    • Categories
    • Tags
    • Popular
    • Users
    • Groups
    • Register
    • Login

    Questions on redundant switch setup

    Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved IT Discussion
    15 Posts 5 Posters 1.0k Views
    Loading More Posts
    • Oldest to Newest
    • Newest to Oldest
    • Most Votes
    Reply
    • Reply as topic
    Log in to reply
    This topic has been deleted. Only users with topic management privileges can see it.
    • dave247D
      dave247 @1337
      last edited by dave247

      @pete-s said in Questions on redundant switch setup:

      @dave247 Thanks Dave, looks like a good solution.

      I don't have any switches yet so any recommendations on what to get?

      Regarding the firewall, I'm leaning toward software based firewalls, like pfsense (freebsd) or vyos (linux) - mainly for performance reasons (openpvn) and flexibility.

      I think the Dell N series switches are great. We use a bunch of Dell N3048s where I work but I think they might be a bit over-kill. They have a lot of features we likely wont ever use. I would suggest looking at the Dell N2000 series depending on your needs. Do some reading on how they stack and their other features.

      Here's info on the N1100 series and at he bottom right of that page are white-sheets on the various other models.

      I've used pfSense before and I think it's pretty good. You would have a lot more flexibility with how you set up your interfaces if you build out a custom system. Or are you buying one of their appliances?

      1 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
      • 1
        1337 @dave247
        last edited by

        @dave247 said in Questions on redundant switch setup:

        @pete-s said in Questions on redundant switch setup:

        @dave247 Thanks Dave, looks like a good solution.

        I don't have any switches yet so any recommendations on what to get?

        Regarding the firewall, I'm leaning toward software based firewalls, like pfsense (freebsd) or vyos (linux) - mainly for performance reasons (openpvn) and flexibility.

        I think the Dell N series switches are great. We use a bunch of Dell N3048s where I work but they have a lot of features we wont ever use. I would suggest looking at Dell N1100 or N2000 series depending on your needs.

        Here's info on the N1100 series and at he bottom right of that page are white-sheets on the various other models.

        Thanks, I'll have a look at them.

        I've used pfSense before and I think it's pretty good. You would have a lot more flexibility with how you set up your interfaces if you build out a custom system. Or are you buying one of their appliances?

        No, I will run it on standard server hardware (supermicro) so I have flexibility when it comes to NICs, storage, RAM & CPU.

        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
        • JaredBuschJ
          JaredBusch @dave247
          last edited by

          @dave247 said in Questions on redundant switch setup:

          @pete-s

          What kind of firewall and switches are you running?

          One option: if you're switches have stacking, then you can put them in a single stack and then create a port group that spans the two switches and then connect that to your NIC teams on the other end. This guards against switch failure, switchport failure, server NIC port failure, Ethernet cable failure, etc..

          0_1538492722247_2c736016-a7ca-4c86-96bc-9550d33aa58b-image.png

          This adds a level of complexity that you don't have to deal with when using a simple team. But the plus side is higher bandwidth per connected server.

          1 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
          • 1
            1337 @JaredBusch
            last edited by

            @jaredbusch said in Questions on redundant switch setup:

            @dave247 said in Questions on redundant switch setup:

            @pete-s

            What kind of firewall and switches are you running?

            One option: if you're switches have stacking, then you can put them in a single stack and then create a port group that spans the two switches and then connect that to your NIC teams on the other end. This guards against switch failure, switchport failure, server NIC port failure, Ethernet cable failure, etc..

            0_1538492722247_2c736016-a7ca-4c86-96bc-9550d33aa58b-image.png

            This adds a level of complexity that you don't have to deal with when using a simple team. But the plus side is higher bandwidth per connected server.

            The "switch independant team" what bonding mode is that in linux? Is it mode 1, active/backup policy?

            dave247D scottalanmillerS 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
            • dave247D
              dave247 @1337
              last edited by dave247

              @pete-s said in Questions on redundant switch setup:

              @jaredbusch said in Questions on redundant switch setup:

              @dave247 said in Questions on redundant switch setup:

              @pete-s

              What kind of firewall and switches are you running?

              One option: if you're switches have stacking, then you can put them in a single stack and then create a port group that spans the two switches and then connect that to your NIC teams on the other end. This guards against switch failure, switchport failure, server NIC port failure, Ethernet cable failure, etc..

              0_1538492722247_2c736016-a7ca-4c86-96bc-9550d33aa58b-image.png

              This adds a level of complexity that you don't have to deal with when using a simple team. But the plus side is higher bandwidth per connected server.

              The "switch independant team" what bonding mode is that in linux? Is it mode 1, active/backup policy?

              You will have to look at your individual network card's drivers and management software with regards to Linux. AKA, read the manual. My guess is that you're running Broadcom NICs and the management software that I've seen/used is called "Broadcom Advanced Control Suite 4" and the "switch independent mode" or team type is called, "Smart Load Balancing and Failover (SLB)".

              1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
              • scottalanmillerS
                scottalanmiller @1337
                last edited by

                @pete-s said in Questions on redundant switch setup:

                @jaredbusch said in Questions on redundant switch setup:

                @dave247 said in Questions on redundant switch setup:

                @pete-s

                What kind of firewall and switches are you running?

                One option: if you're switches have stacking, then you can put them in a single stack and then create a port group that spans the two switches and then connect that to your NIC teams on the other end. This guards against switch failure, switchport failure, server NIC port failure, Ethernet cable failure, etc..

                0_1538492722247_2c736016-a7ca-4c86-96bc-9550d33aa58b-image.png

                This adds a level of complexity that you don't have to deal with when using a simple team. But the plus side is higher bandwidth per connected server.

                The "switch independant team" what bonding mode is that in linux? Is it mode 1, active/backup policy?

                Should be Mode 4

                1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                • 1
                  1337
                  last edited by

                  @dave247 said in Questions on redundant switch setup:

                  @pete-s said in Questions on redundant switch setup:

                  @jaredbusch said in Questions on redundant switch setup:

                  @dave247 said in Questions on redundant switch setup:

                  @pete-s

                  What kind of firewall and switches are you running?

                  One option: if you're switches have stacking, then you can put them in a single stack and then create a port group that spans the two switches and then connect that to your NIC teams on the other end. This guards against switch failure, switchport failure, server NIC port failure, Ethernet cable failure, etc..

                  0_1538492722247_2c736016-a7ca-4c86-96bc-9550d33aa58b-image.png

                  This adds a level of complexity that you don't have to deal with when using a simple team. But the plus side is higher bandwidth per connected server.

                  The "switch independant team" what bonding mode is that in linux? Is it mode 1, active/backup policy?

                  You will have to look at your individual network card's drivers and management software with regards to Linux. AKA, read the manual. My guess is that you're running Broadcom NICs and the management software that I've seen/used is called "Broadcom Advanced Control Suite 4" and the "switch independent mode" or team type is called, "Smart Load Balancing and Failover (SLB)".

                  I'm all Intel on the NIC side in this case as Supermicro is predominately intel NICs and they are very well supported both in freebsd and linux.

                  Contrary to Windows, linux actually have bonding of different types in the kernel (a module called bonding). So the drivers don't have to do bonding.

                  dave247D 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                  • dave247D
                    dave247 @1337
                    last edited by

                    @pete-s said in Questions on redundant switch setup:

                    @dave247 said in Questions on redundant switch setup:

                    @pete-s said in Questions on redundant switch setup:

                    @jaredbusch said in Questions on redundant switch setup:

                    @dave247 said in Questions on redundant switch setup:

                    @pete-s

                    What kind of firewall and switches are you running?

                    One option: if you're switches have stacking, then you can put them in a single stack and then create a port group that spans the two switches and then connect that to your NIC teams on the other end. This guards against switch failure, switchport failure, server NIC port failure, Ethernet cable failure, etc..

                    0_1538492722247_2c736016-a7ca-4c86-96bc-9550d33aa58b-image.png

                    This adds a level of complexity that you don't have to deal with when using a simple team. But the plus side is higher bandwidth per connected server.

                    The "switch independant team" what bonding mode is that in linux? Is it mode 1, active/backup policy?

                    You will have to look at your individual network card's drivers and management software with regards to Linux. AKA, read the manual. My guess is that you're running Broadcom NICs and the management software that I've seen/used is called "Broadcom Advanced Control Suite 4" and the "switch independent mode" or team type is called, "Smart Load Balancing and Failover (SLB)".

                    I'm all Intel on the NIC side in this case as Supermicro is predominately intel NICs and they are very well supported both in freebsd and linux.

                    Contrary to Windows, linux actually have bonding of different types in the kernel (a module called bonding). So the drivers don't have to do bonding.

                    oh nice. I have no idea. I haven't done much with Linux lately. Still, I would read the NIC documentation as it pertains to Linux.

                    JaredBuschJ 1 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
                    • JaredBuschJ
                      JaredBusch @dave247
                      last edited by

                      @dave247 said in Questions on redundant switch setup:

                      @pete-s said in Questions on redundant switch setup:

                      @dave247 said in Questions on redundant switch setup:

                      @pete-s said in Questions on redundant switch setup:

                      @jaredbusch said in Questions on redundant switch setup:

                      @dave247 said in Questions on redundant switch setup:

                      @pete-s

                      What kind of firewall and switches are you running?

                      One option: if you're switches have stacking, then you can put them in a single stack and then create a port group that spans the two switches and then connect that to your NIC teams on the other end. This guards against switch failure, switchport failure, server NIC port failure, Ethernet cable failure, etc..

                      0_1538492722247_2c736016-a7ca-4c86-96bc-9550d33aa58b-image.png

                      This adds a level of complexity that you don't have to deal with when using a simple team. But the plus side is higher bandwidth per connected server.

                      The "switch independant team" what bonding mode is that in linux? Is it mode 1, active/backup policy?

                      You will have to look at your individual network card's drivers and management software with regards to Linux. AKA, read the manual. My guess is that you're running Broadcom NICs and the management software that I've seen/used is called "Broadcom Advanced Control Suite 4" and the "switch independent mode" or team type is called, "Smart Load Balancing and Failover (SLB)".

                      I'm all Intel on the NIC side in this case as Supermicro is predominately intel NICs and they are very well supported both in freebsd and linux.

                      Contrary to Windows, linux actually have bonding of different types in the kernel (a module called bonding). So the drivers don't have to do bonding.

                      oh nice. I have no idea. I haven't done much with Linux lately. Still, I would read the NIC documentation as it pertains to Linux.

                      I also do the NIC teaming in Windows from PowerShell. It has nothing to do with the NIC drivers themselves.

                      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                      • 1
                        1337 @dave247
                        last edited by 1337

                        @dave247 said in Questions on redundant switch setup:

                        @pete-s said in Questions on redundant switch setup:

                        @dave247 said in Questions on redundant switch setup:

                        @pete-s said in Questions on redundant switch setup:

                        @jaredbusch said in Questions on redundant switch setup:

                        @dave247 said in Questions on redundant switch setup:

                        @pete-s

                        What kind of firewall and switches are you running?

                        One option: if you're switches have stacking, then you can put them in a single stack and then create a port group that spans the two switches and then connect that to your NIC teams on the other end. This guards against switch failure, switchport failure, server NIC port failure, Ethernet cable failure, etc..

                        0_1538492722247_2c736016-a7ca-4c86-96bc-9550d33aa58b-image.png

                        This adds a level of complexity that you don't have to deal with when using a simple team. But the plus side is higher bandwidth per connected server.

                        The "switch independant team" what bonding mode is that in linux? Is it mode 1, active/backup policy?

                        You will have to look at your individual network card's drivers and management software with regards to Linux. AKA, read the manual. My guess is that you're running Broadcom NICs and the management software that I've seen/used is called "Broadcom Advanced Control Suite 4" and the "switch independent mode" or team type is called, "Smart Load Balancing and Failover (SLB)".

                        I'm all Intel on the NIC side in this case as Supermicro is predominately intel NICs and they are very well supported both in freebsd and linux.

                        Contrary to Windows, linux actually have bonding of different types in the kernel (a module called bonding). So the drivers don't have to do bonding.

                        oh nice. I have no idea. I haven't done much with Linux lately. Still, I would read the NIC documentation as it pertains to Linux.

                        Looking at Dell switches it seems like Dell N1124 will do the job. It's 24x1G switch with 4x10G for uplinks and stacking and has most of the features of it's bigger brothers in the N2000, N3000 series.
                        Pricing looks very attractive where I'm at (<$400 USD per switch), otherwise it's $1259 in the dell.com store.
                        I've never used Dell switches though.

                        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                        • 1 / 1
                        • First post
                          Last post