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Topic: LAGG redesign question (Read 1003 times)
EHRETic
Newbie
Posts: 41
Karma: 0
LAGG redesign question
«
on:
January 31, 2023, 11:31:14 am »
Hi there,
I've a question concerning my firewall NIC/LAGG design.
Up to now, I had a single switch (Ubiquiti) and I had 2 physical NICs configured in LACP on my OPNsense firewall. All interfaces were managed by different VLANs (including WAN connectivity)
But to ease the whole firmware patch management and offer redundancy on several systems, I bought a second switch.
Now, as Ubiquiti doesn't offer LACP on several physical switches, I'm wondering what is the best LAGG type I should now configure to have redundancy/a bit of load balancing between both links: would you choose
failover
,
loadbalance
or
round robin
?
My first reflex would be to go to
loadbalance
, but maybe there is a few things to consider before. Maybe a LAGG is not the best option at all.
Thanks in advance for your advices!
PS:
If required/better
, I could add 2 physical NICs in the server (but from the load, it is not necessary at all)
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Patrick M. Hausen
Hero Member
Posts: 6812
Karma: 572
Re: LAGG redesign question
«
Reply #1 on:
January 31, 2023, 11:52:38 am »
Failover is the only setting that
might
work. All other settings will lead to packets out of order. Very bad idea.
If you need redundancy, get a pair of switches that support multi-chassis LACP, plain and simple.
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Deciso DEC750
People who think they know everything are a great annoyance to those of us who do.
(Isaac Asimov)
EHRETic
Newbie
Posts: 41
Karma: 0
Re: LAGG redesign question
«
Reply #2 on:
January 31, 2023, 01:06:14 pm »
Quote from: pmhausen on January 31, 2023, 11:52:38 am
Failover is the only setting that
might
work.
Would you know what would mean
"If the master port becomes unavailable, the next active port is used."
?
Depends really on how the unavailability is defined. The physical connectivity might always be on in case of switch reboot and traffic interrupted anyway
But I guess I'll to try no?
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Patrick M. Hausen
Hero Member
Posts: 6812
Karma: 572
Re: LAGG redesign question
«
Reply #3 on:
January 31, 2023, 01:32:41 pm »
While the switch reboots the port is not in a forwarding state, so the failure will be detected and a failover occurs. This is not a simple electrical plug. There is signaling and a handshake protocol on the wire for gigabit Ethernet and above.
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Deciso DEC750
People who think they know everything are a great annoyance to those of us who do.
(Isaac Asimov)
EHRETic
Newbie
Posts: 41
Karma: 0
Re: LAGG redesign question
«
Reply #4 on:
January 31, 2023, 01:46:45 pm »
@pmhausen thanks a lot, I think this answers my questions!
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