this post was submitted on 13 Nov 2023
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Home Networking

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Right now, I am in the process of redesigning my network and I had the Idea to connect my two main switches and my FW with a ring like topology. I know that in a typical home network with a 50/10 WAN connection this is absolutely unnecessary. I want to do this anyway, for learning and bragging purpose.

Assuming that I have several VLANs and on each switch at least one device in each VLAN. All Connections between the two switches and the FW are trunk routes for all VLANs. The Omada Controller is running virtualized on a server connected to one of the switches.

My Goal is to distribute traffic over all connections to avoid bottlenecks. I don't want traffic for devices within the same subnet to flow through FW and I don't want Internet traffic flow through the connection between switches.

I first read the LACP documentation for omada and OPNsense, but it is mostly intended for two or more lines between two devices and not for a ring topology like I want.

I then read the (R)STP documentation and couldn't find an option that doesn't simply cut one connection, but "directs" traffic base on the shortest route.

โ€‹

Did I miss something in the documentation, should I look at another protocol/option, or is this something prosumer hardware like I use simply isn't capable of?

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[โ€“] bchiodini@alien.top 1 points 1 year ago

It depends on the capabilities of your switches. This Cisco article has some foundational info.

Depending on the number of switches, VLANs and trunks, this could get exponentially complicated.

Getting it to work would definitely earn you bragging rights.