Hello,
I'm (re)building a network for a small school. As a Linux sysadmin, I don't have much hands-on experience with networking hardware (I usually step in once the metal is in place), so sorry if my questions might be trivial.
The school is in a single-floor, roughly T-shaped building, with concrete walls. There are 5 office rooms on the short side of the "T", and 4 big classrooms aligned in a row on the long side (building is approx 30 m x 60 m).
Current situation is messy and difficult to manage, so I'm going to replace most of the gear.
I'm asked to provide two wifi networks that should work everywhere. First one (let's call it "BackofficeWifi") should be used by both teachers and employees, that need to use network printers and a file server.
Second one should be used by students (let's call it "StudentsWifi") and should be able to use a second file server. Both groups of users should be able to surf the Net.
Rooms are already cabled with Cat 6 cables, connected to a 24-ports Netgear JGS524E managed switch, placed in a small room at the intersection of the "T", with the main file server that acts also as a DNS and DHCP server.
How would you setup this network?
I think we could get 4 or 5 wifi access points (one each 2 rooms), wire them to the switch, and setup them to broadcast two wifi SSIDs on two different VLANs - I've read that some AP can broadcast several SSIDs and put them on different VLANs.
Is this VLAN tech somehow "standard", or vendor-dependent? For example, current VLAN features on current Netgear switch will work with access points from other vendors?
Once I put "StudentsWifi" devices on a different VLAN than "BackofficeWifi", should I put there a DHCP server too? (I can use the second file server for the purpose)
To allow roaming between the APs I should disable automatic channel selection and set different channels on each device, right?
School hardware is quite recent so it will use the 5GHz wifi, but since a few teachers sometimes bring their older laptops, I need to keep on also the 2.4 Ghz wifi.
Looking around in my area I found these access points that seems to support multi-SSID and VLAN - are they good for this project?
- TP-Link CAP300
- Netgear WAC505B05
I've seen also that those APs use get power from PoE - should we replace the current switch to get one that provides PoE? Alternative options?
Thanks in advance,
gerlos
I'm (re)building a network for a small school. As a Linux sysadmin, I don't have much hands-on experience with networking hardware (I usually step in once the metal is in place), so sorry if my questions might be trivial.
The school is in a single-floor, roughly T-shaped building, with concrete walls. There are 5 office rooms on the short side of the "T", and 4 big classrooms aligned in a row on the long side (building is approx 30 m x 60 m).
Current situation is messy and difficult to manage, so I'm going to replace most of the gear.
I'm asked to provide two wifi networks that should work everywhere. First one (let's call it "BackofficeWifi") should be used by both teachers and employees, that need to use network printers and a file server.
Second one should be used by students (let's call it "StudentsWifi") and should be able to use a second file server. Both groups of users should be able to surf the Net.
Rooms are already cabled with Cat 6 cables, connected to a 24-ports Netgear JGS524E managed switch, placed in a small room at the intersection of the "T", with the main file server that acts also as a DNS and DHCP server.
How would you setup this network?
I think we could get 4 or 5 wifi access points (one each 2 rooms), wire them to the switch, and setup them to broadcast two wifi SSIDs on two different VLANs - I've read that some AP can broadcast several SSIDs and put them on different VLANs.
Is this VLAN tech somehow "standard", or vendor-dependent? For example, current VLAN features on current Netgear switch will work with access points from other vendors?
Once I put "StudentsWifi" devices on a different VLAN than "BackofficeWifi", should I put there a DHCP server too? (I can use the second file server for the purpose)
To allow roaming between the APs I should disable automatic channel selection and set different channels on each device, right?
School hardware is quite recent so it will use the 5GHz wifi, but since a few teachers sometimes bring their older laptops, I need to keep on also the 2.4 Ghz wifi.
Looking around in my area I found these access points that seems to support multi-SSID and VLAN - are they good for this project?
- TP-Link CAP300
- Netgear WAC505B05
I've seen also that those APs use get power from PoE - should we replace the current switch to get one that provides PoE? Alternative options?
Thanks in advance,
gerlos