* [Bridge] help setting up a linux bridge with spanning tree to allow multiple vlans accross multiple uplinks
@ 2005-03-24 9:56 Marius Karthaus
0 siblings, 0 replies; 2+ messages in thread
From: Marius Karthaus @ 2005-03-24 9:56 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: bridge
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For easy reading: http://www.karthaus.nl/r/
Hi,
We used to have 1 single ip range (1.1.1.0/24) that had one uplink to a
switch of the colocation provider.
Recently we got a second range 2.2.2.0/24 and a redundant uplink
directly on two routers. But our switch does not have spanning tree
protocol support so we cannot use them redundantly.
We have set up the switch to have a vlan for both networks like in this
picture:
http://www.karthaus.nl/r/r1.gif
this way all hosts on the switch can use ips from either network.
However if one of the routers fails, one of the ranges fails. This
happens quite a lot but this whould not be a problem if we had spanning
tree that whould allow us to use both uplinks for both networks.
I would like to use a linux box to do this until we can get a switch
that is capable of stp. I was thinking of something like this:
http://www.karthaus.nl/r/r2.gif
After reading the documentation on linux bridging and stp i'm convinced
it's possible but i'm not at all sure exactly how to do this. The box
that i want to use should probably have three NIC's, one for each
routeruplink and one that connects to our switch. (see the picture). I'm
guessing that i need to set up multiple bridges each containing a subset
of the NIC eth0,eth1 and eth2. But this is where i'm confused.
Can anyone show me how to set this up please?
Regards,
M.Karthaus
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^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 2+ messages in thread
* [Bridge] help setting up a linux bridge with spanning tree to allow multiple vlans accross multiple uplinks
@ 2005-03-14 13:38 Marius Karthaus
0 siblings, 0 replies; 2+ messages in thread
From: Marius Karthaus @ 2005-03-14 13:38 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: bridge
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For easy reading: http://www.karthaus.nl/r/
Hi,
We used to have 1 single ip range (1.1.1.0/24) that had one uplink to a
switch of the colocation provider.
Recently we got a second range 2.2.2.0/24 and a redundant uplink
directly on two routers. But our switch does not have spanning tree
protocol support so we cannot use them redundantly.
We have set up the switch to have a vlan for both networks like in this
picture:
http://www.karthaus.nl/r/r1.gif
this way all hosts on the switch can use ips from either network.
However if one of the routers fails, one of the ranges fails. This
happens quite a lot but this whould not be a problem if we had spanning
tree that whould allow us to use both uplinks for both networks.
I would like to use a linux box to do this until we can get a switch
that is capable of stp. I was thinking of something like this:
http://www.karthaus.nl/r/r2.gif
After reading the documentation on linux bridging and stp i'm convinced
it's possible but i'm not at all sure exactly how to do this. The box
that i want to use should probably have three NIC's, one for each
routeruplink and one that connects to our switch. (see the picture). I'm
guessing that i need to set up multiple bridges each containing a subset
of the NIC eth0,eth1 and eth2. But this is where i'm confused.
Can anyone show me how to set this up please?
Regards,
M.Karthaus
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^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 2+ messages in thread
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