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I'm the resident IT guy in an office with about 20 workers, amongst 3 separate companies who sublet an office.

We are wired with 24 ethernet ports dotted around the offices that all lead to a patch panel in my office. They are connected to 4 unmanaged switches into our ISP-supplied, cheap, router. (Internet is provided by a regular ADSL2+ provided by BT in the UK).

The problem is we are all one network, despite being separate companies, which is a security concern so we want to separate the logical/virtual networks (presumably, VLANs), but our current basic router doesn't support port-based VLANs.

I'm consider two options to isolate the networks, and I'd like advice which will do the trick:

  1. A enterprise 4-port router (perhaps a Zyxel P660HN-51 or Draytek Vigor) that supports port-based VLANs, and plug our existing unmanaged switches into that:

    4-port router and unmanaged switches (obviously, I would restricted to 3-4 VLANs, but that's fine

  2. Or, a large 24-port managed switch (like a Cisco), that supports allows me to define which of it's many ports belong to which VLANs.

    ADSL router and managed network I understand that this can just work in a "router-on-a-stick" configuration. Crucially, my network cupboard is too small to fit a typical 24 port switch, It's only got about 22cm depth.

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  • Nope, at it's heart it's simple advantages/disadvatages of router+unmanaged switches vs only a managed switch and is quite an original question. I did extensive research to try and find an previous Q&A across stackexchange and the web, but came up short. The involved bit after the horizontal rule can be discarded - I'm not asking someone to design my network, but merely advise on one or two options.
    – Ash
    Jul 21, 2013 at 21:07
  • OK, I've removed all the requirements totally, so now it's a question of router's port-based VLANs that feed unmanaged switches for expansion, vs managed switch's VLANs. Better?
    – Ash
    Jul 21, 2013 at 21:22
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    For those curious, I originally also had a wishlist of features that the router or switch should support, principly QoS, (R)STP, and bonded/failover WAN/ADSL so I could use another ADSL line as a backup
    – Ash
    Jul 21, 2013 at 21:24
  • ...wow, are those hand-drawn diagrams?
    – voretaq7
    Jul 22, 2013 at 19:49
  • Any decent solutions worth considering will support your requirements (QoS, (R)STP, Bonding/Failover) -- If you encounter a solution that doesn't I would suggest you write it off.
    – voretaq7
    Jul 22, 2013 at 19:59

3 Answers 3

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As long as the companies only share the internet connection and have no need to share other resources (like file servers), I clearly would favor option 1.

If you have separate companies and have become the administrator by chance rather than an external, binding decision for every of the companies, one of the things you would want most would be a clean, well-defined interface / point of transfer. This is what you get by having a single uplink port towards a router with an own subnet (better yet, an own public IPv4 address / IPv6 subnet and another router for them to administer). Each of the companies could choose its own switch and, more importantly, its own administrator for this switch.

If you choose to use option 2, the main disadvantage will be that you will be the contact person for everything for ever. Even if any of the companies are going to employ an own administrator, there is a good chance that it always will be you who is obstructing things, breaking things or not doing things right in their opinion. Expect even a broken toilet flush to be within your responsibility.

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  • BTW, you probably would not want a Zyxel P660HN-51 but rather something from the Zyxel USG series.
    – the-wabbit
    Jul 21, 2013 at 22:06
  • Interesting, why are the USG better? Do they act well as routers and have port-based VLANs? (The Zyxel site is sparse on specifications for these).
    – Ash
    Jul 22, 2013 at 18:04
  • @AshirusNW Yes and yes. I have always found that user guides, especially CLI reference guides are much better suited to determine if a piece of equipment is going to meet the project's need than any of the data sheets available. The USGs are more sophisticated and will allow for finer grained configurations and a deeper level of troubleshooting. The feature set is comparable to Junipers' smaller routers, bare the virtualization
    – the-wabbit
    Jul 22, 2013 at 19:10
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Option 2 - will give you the opportunity to buy a L3 switch with more capability, capacity, flexibility and resilience than option 1. Overall performance will is likely to be higher, you'll have the option to use PoE ports for the phones if you wish and you'll have the option to run some form of network management tool tool so you know what's going on and where.

Option 1 is going to keep you busy, but it's obviously cheaper than option 2.

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  • My problem with option 2 is that the patch panel is in a tiny cupboard and the 24-port switches I've looked at all like like 1U size which is a little too deep to fit in my little DIY Ikea network cupboard. I'm no network pro, and I'm glad to hear option 1 could work!
    – Ash
    Jul 21, 2013 at 21:25
  • Why would option 1 preclude running network management tools? This is important to me as one of our sublet offices has a habit of plugging naughty devices into the RJ45s, e.g. their own router with DHCP turned on! It would be nice to detect this (which is why I originally really wanted RSTP). Btw, about PoE, can't one or all of the unmanaged switched support PoE?
    – Ash
    Jul 21, 2013 at 21:28
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I would favor Option 3 personally:

  • Install a proper "Big Managed Switch" like you have in Option 2
  • Put each company in their own VLAN.
  • For the uplinks you have a few choices:
    • Give each company their own uplink (modem, etc.) inside their vLAN like you have in Option 1.
    • Install a decent firewall like PFSense with an interface in each vLAN and funnel all your traffic through one modem (like you have in option 2)
    • Install a decent firewall with an interface in each vLAN and some crafty traffic rules to separate some users onto their own uplinks and have everyone else use a shared link.

(A decent firewall would also let you establish rules so the companies can access each other's resources as-needed, as well as giving you the ability to run monitoring/administration software that can see into all of the networks).

This is definitely an expensive alternative, but the flexibility is such that it's worth it if you're going to be holding this job for a while.

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