How can I control bandwidth, access times and priority per VLAN The 2019 Stack Overflow Developer Survey Results Are InHow do I segregate two VLANs from each other while allowing both to communicate with a third VLAN?Limited bandwidth and transfer rates per userNew network design from a noob. VLANS, IP's, hardware, etc. Any comments pleaseAP with multiple SSIDs and VLANsVLAN Through Switch Doesn't WorkIs it possible to restrict the connection duration per client on the router (say with OpenWRT)?TP-Link AP EAP120 proper setup : SSID and 2.4GHz frequenciesBest way to connect dual SSID / VLAN wireless to Watchguard firewallIsolating traffic between devices connected to same APCisco IOS Switch Native VLAN
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How can I control bandwidth, access times and priority per VLAN
The 2019 Stack Overflow Developer Survey Results Are InHow do I segregate two VLANs from each other while allowing both to communicate with a third VLAN?Limited bandwidth and transfer rates per userNew network design from a noob. VLANS, IP's, hardware, etc. Any comments pleaseAP with multiple SSIDs and VLANsVLAN Through Switch Doesn't WorkIs it possible to restrict the connection duration per client on the router (say with OpenWRT)?TP-Link AP EAP120 proper setup : SSID and 2.4GHz frequenciesBest way to connect dual SSID / VLAN wireless to Watchguard firewallIsolating traffic between devices connected to same APCisco IOS Switch Native VLAN
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I'm setting up access points (TL-WA901ND) that can each support up to four SSIDs, which can be assigned to VLANs. I would like to set up three SSIDs, each on a different VLAN, with the following behavior:
- The ADMIN SSID (say VLAN 1) gets unlimited bandwidth with unlimited access and high priority.
- The STAFF SSID (say VLAN 2) gets limited bandwidth with limited hours per day and medium priority.
- The STUDENT SSID (say VLAN 3) gets limited bandwidth with limited hours per day & low priority, with different limits than those for staff.
Routers and switches seem to be able to control bandwidth and access times based on everything but VLAN. Thanks for insight!
BTW I've read other questions addressing this topic, but the environments were much larger and the solutions had components we probably can't afford. We're only about 50 users total, so not really an enterprise per se but the question also seems a bit over the head of SuperUser forum & so I'm here.
Gracious thanks.
networking router wifi vlan access-point
add a comment |
I'm setting up access points (TL-WA901ND) that can each support up to four SSIDs, which can be assigned to VLANs. I would like to set up three SSIDs, each on a different VLAN, with the following behavior:
- The ADMIN SSID (say VLAN 1) gets unlimited bandwidth with unlimited access and high priority.
- The STAFF SSID (say VLAN 2) gets limited bandwidth with limited hours per day and medium priority.
- The STUDENT SSID (say VLAN 3) gets limited bandwidth with limited hours per day & low priority, with different limits than those for staff.
Routers and switches seem to be able to control bandwidth and access times based on everything but VLAN. Thanks for insight!
BTW I've read other questions addressing this topic, but the environments were much larger and the solutions had components we probably can't afford. We're only about 50 users total, so not really an enterprise per se but the question also seems a bit over the head of SuperUser forum & so I'm here.
Gracious thanks.
networking router wifi vlan access-point
Do you want to limit the bandwidth in the APs?
– Christopher Perrin
Oct 11 '14 at 20:21
@ChristopherPerrin that would be fine; however, the TL-WA901ND doesn't seem to be able to do that. It would have to be able to set limits per SSID, though.
– Eric Nelson
Oct 11 '14 at 21:06
add a comment |
I'm setting up access points (TL-WA901ND) that can each support up to four SSIDs, which can be assigned to VLANs. I would like to set up three SSIDs, each on a different VLAN, with the following behavior:
- The ADMIN SSID (say VLAN 1) gets unlimited bandwidth with unlimited access and high priority.
- The STAFF SSID (say VLAN 2) gets limited bandwidth with limited hours per day and medium priority.
- The STUDENT SSID (say VLAN 3) gets limited bandwidth with limited hours per day & low priority, with different limits than those for staff.
Routers and switches seem to be able to control bandwidth and access times based on everything but VLAN. Thanks for insight!
BTW I've read other questions addressing this topic, but the environments were much larger and the solutions had components we probably can't afford. We're only about 50 users total, so not really an enterprise per se but the question also seems a bit over the head of SuperUser forum & so I'm here.
Gracious thanks.
networking router wifi vlan access-point
I'm setting up access points (TL-WA901ND) that can each support up to four SSIDs, which can be assigned to VLANs. I would like to set up three SSIDs, each on a different VLAN, with the following behavior:
- The ADMIN SSID (say VLAN 1) gets unlimited bandwidth with unlimited access and high priority.
- The STAFF SSID (say VLAN 2) gets limited bandwidth with limited hours per day and medium priority.
- The STUDENT SSID (say VLAN 3) gets limited bandwidth with limited hours per day & low priority, with different limits than those for staff.
Routers and switches seem to be able to control bandwidth and access times based on everything but VLAN. Thanks for insight!
BTW I've read other questions addressing this topic, but the environments were much larger and the solutions had components we probably can't afford. We're only about 50 users total, so not really an enterprise per se but the question also seems a bit over the head of SuperUser forum & so I'm here.
Gracious thanks.
networking router wifi vlan access-point
networking router wifi vlan access-point
asked Oct 11 '14 at 19:59
Eric NelsonEric Nelson
1011
1011
Do you want to limit the bandwidth in the APs?
– Christopher Perrin
Oct 11 '14 at 20:21
@ChristopherPerrin that would be fine; however, the TL-WA901ND doesn't seem to be able to do that. It would have to be able to set limits per SSID, though.
– Eric Nelson
Oct 11 '14 at 21:06
add a comment |
Do you want to limit the bandwidth in the APs?
– Christopher Perrin
Oct 11 '14 at 20:21
@ChristopherPerrin that would be fine; however, the TL-WA901ND doesn't seem to be able to do that. It would have to be able to set limits per SSID, though.
– Eric Nelson
Oct 11 '14 at 21:06
Do you want to limit the bandwidth in the APs?
– Christopher Perrin
Oct 11 '14 at 20:21
Do you want to limit the bandwidth in the APs?
– Christopher Perrin
Oct 11 '14 at 20:21
@ChristopherPerrin that would be fine; however, the TL-WA901ND doesn't seem to be able to do that. It would have to be able to set limits per SSID, though.
– Eric Nelson
Oct 11 '14 at 21:06
@ChristopherPerrin that would be fine; however, the TL-WA901ND doesn't seem to be able to do that. It would have to be able to set limits per SSID, though.
– Eric Nelson
Oct 11 '14 at 21:06
add a comment |
1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
Many routers can provide the types of quality-of-service functions you're asking about for different VLANs. To routers, different VLANs typically appear as virtual interfaces, and you can often apply different routing policies based on ingress / egress interfaces.
Don't get too hung-up on the VLAN part of this. If worse comes to worse, you could use a router device with multiple physical interfaces each dedicated to servicing a given VLAN. (Any modern router, though, is going to handle VLAN subinterfaces on a single physical interface just fine.)
A Linux machine running iptables
and the tc
traffic control tools could do what you want. There are very likely firewall-oriented distributions out there that could handle your needs. Likewise, the FreeBSD "pfSense" distribution will handle it, too.
Finally, there are a large number of commercial offerings that can handle your needs. The lower-end Dell SonicWall devices, for example, can do what you're looking for.
I had a suspicion there was some iptables magic that could do this. Would dd-wrt or openwrt be a good choice? PS this is going into an orphanage in southern Belize... leaving tomorrow.
– Eric Nelson
Oct 14 '14 at 23:51
add a comment |
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1 Answer
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oldest
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1 Answer
1
active
oldest
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active
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votes
Many routers can provide the types of quality-of-service functions you're asking about for different VLANs. To routers, different VLANs typically appear as virtual interfaces, and you can often apply different routing policies based on ingress / egress interfaces.
Don't get too hung-up on the VLAN part of this. If worse comes to worse, you could use a router device with multiple physical interfaces each dedicated to servicing a given VLAN. (Any modern router, though, is going to handle VLAN subinterfaces on a single physical interface just fine.)
A Linux machine running iptables
and the tc
traffic control tools could do what you want. There are very likely firewall-oriented distributions out there that could handle your needs. Likewise, the FreeBSD "pfSense" distribution will handle it, too.
Finally, there are a large number of commercial offerings that can handle your needs. The lower-end Dell SonicWall devices, for example, can do what you're looking for.
I had a suspicion there was some iptables magic that could do this. Would dd-wrt or openwrt be a good choice? PS this is going into an orphanage in southern Belize... leaving tomorrow.
– Eric Nelson
Oct 14 '14 at 23:51
add a comment |
Many routers can provide the types of quality-of-service functions you're asking about for different VLANs. To routers, different VLANs typically appear as virtual interfaces, and you can often apply different routing policies based on ingress / egress interfaces.
Don't get too hung-up on the VLAN part of this. If worse comes to worse, you could use a router device with multiple physical interfaces each dedicated to servicing a given VLAN. (Any modern router, though, is going to handle VLAN subinterfaces on a single physical interface just fine.)
A Linux machine running iptables
and the tc
traffic control tools could do what you want. There are very likely firewall-oriented distributions out there that could handle your needs. Likewise, the FreeBSD "pfSense" distribution will handle it, too.
Finally, there are a large number of commercial offerings that can handle your needs. The lower-end Dell SonicWall devices, for example, can do what you're looking for.
I had a suspicion there was some iptables magic that could do this. Would dd-wrt or openwrt be a good choice? PS this is going into an orphanage in southern Belize... leaving tomorrow.
– Eric Nelson
Oct 14 '14 at 23:51
add a comment |
Many routers can provide the types of quality-of-service functions you're asking about for different VLANs. To routers, different VLANs typically appear as virtual interfaces, and you can often apply different routing policies based on ingress / egress interfaces.
Don't get too hung-up on the VLAN part of this. If worse comes to worse, you could use a router device with multiple physical interfaces each dedicated to servicing a given VLAN. (Any modern router, though, is going to handle VLAN subinterfaces on a single physical interface just fine.)
A Linux machine running iptables
and the tc
traffic control tools could do what you want. There are very likely firewall-oriented distributions out there that could handle your needs. Likewise, the FreeBSD "pfSense" distribution will handle it, too.
Finally, there are a large number of commercial offerings that can handle your needs. The lower-end Dell SonicWall devices, for example, can do what you're looking for.
Many routers can provide the types of quality-of-service functions you're asking about for different VLANs. To routers, different VLANs typically appear as virtual interfaces, and you can often apply different routing policies based on ingress / egress interfaces.
Don't get too hung-up on the VLAN part of this. If worse comes to worse, you could use a router device with multiple physical interfaces each dedicated to servicing a given VLAN. (Any modern router, though, is going to handle VLAN subinterfaces on a single physical interface just fine.)
A Linux machine running iptables
and the tc
traffic control tools could do what you want. There are very likely firewall-oriented distributions out there that could handle your needs. Likewise, the FreeBSD "pfSense" distribution will handle it, too.
Finally, there are a large number of commercial offerings that can handle your needs. The lower-end Dell SonicWall devices, for example, can do what you're looking for.
answered Oct 14 '14 at 18:24
Evan AndersonEvan Anderson
135k14170312
135k14170312
I had a suspicion there was some iptables magic that could do this. Would dd-wrt or openwrt be a good choice? PS this is going into an orphanage in southern Belize... leaving tomorrow.
– Eric Nelson
Oct 14 '14 at 23:51
add a comment |
I had a suspicion there was some iptables magic that could do this. Would dd-wrt or openwrt be a good choice? PS this is going into an orphanage in southern Belize... leaving tomorrow.
– Eric Nelson
Oct 14 '14 at 23:51
I had a suspicion there was some iptables magic that could do this. Would dd-wrt or openwrt be a good choice? PS this is going into an orphanage in southern Belize... leaving tomorrow.
– Eric Nelson
Oct 14 '14 at 23:51
I had a suspicion there was some iptables magic that could do this. Would dd-wrt or openwrt be a good choice? PS this is going into an orphanage in southern Belize... leaving tomorrow.
– Eric Nelson
Oct 14 '14 at 23:51
add a comment |
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Do you want to limit the bandwidth in the APs?
– Christopher Perrin
Oct 11 '14 at 20:21
@ChristopherPerrin that would be fine; however, the TL-WA901ND doesn't seem to be able to do that. It would have to be able to set limits per SSID, though.
– Eric Nelson
Oct 11 '14 at 21:06