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    Unifi switch - tagged traffic issues

    IT Discussion
    unifi ubnt ubiquiti vlan networking switch
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    • D
      Dashrender
      last edited by Dashrender

      I'm trying to put a device on my Unifi Switch that has tagged traffic. My switch is set to allow all traffic on the port, but I currently don't see a way to mark it as Tagged traffic is allowed. Still digging through the documentation.

      Note - well, none of these changes made any difference. The default is to allow all known VLANs on all ports, and have the default LAN be the untagged traffic.
      My issue was on the uplink switch - that switch didn't allow VLAN2 on the incoming port. Adjusted that, and it all worked.

      https://i.imgur.com/CznwCsQ.png
      https://i.imgur.com/AIrkvtT.png

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      • J
        JaredBusch
        last edited by

        Real switches are oh so hard!
        0_1487632099695_upload-a7546ef3-20f5-4862-a3d8-64e3bb4105a8

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        • D
          Dashrender @JaredBusch
          last edited by

          @JaredBusch said in Unifi switch - tagged traffic issues:

          Real switches are oh so hard!

          yeah yeah.

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          • D
            Dashrender
            last edited by

            https://i.imgur.com/n89GeQi.png
            https://i.imgur.com/lfrEUsl.png

            1- name new network
            2 - choose the untagged network
            3 - choose what tagged networks are allowed on this network

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            • D
              Dashrender
              last edited by

              Finally, edit the ports you want to apply this network to and select the new network you just created.

              https://i.imgur.com/r5zmIyY.png

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              • D
                Dashrender
                last edited by

                Ug not working 😞

                Tomorrow I guess.

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                • D
                  Dashrender
                  last edited by

                  Back to the problem at hand.

                  By default, the Unifi switch lists all ports as ALL in the Network/VLAN settings. Which I know was at least partially working. I know because I set my uplink port to the new LAN I created above, which only allowed the corporate network and tagged VLAN 2 traffic, and my WIFI stopped working (which is on VLAN 105). Moving the uplink port back to ALL solved that issue.

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                  • D
                    Dashrender
                    last edited by Dashrender

                    But - there is an even bigger reason to not have my DHCP server give IPs to the public, and that's Windows licensing. Windows licensing is required when using Windows DHCP and DNS, and since I'm not going to license for the public, I might as well just put them on their own segment with a DHCP/DNS server I don't have to worry about licenses for. (which is what I'm doing now with an ER-X)

                    I'm pretty sure this also means I can't use the Unifi Guest network WiFi option either.

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                    • S
                      scottalanmiller @Dashrender
                      last edited by

                      @Dashrender said in Unifi switch - tagged traffic issues:

                      But - there is an even bigger reason to not have my DHCP server give IPs to the public, and that's Windows licensing. Windows licensing is required when using Windows DHCP and DNS, and since I'm not going to license for the public, I might as well just put them on their own segment with a DHCP/DNS server I don't have to worry about licenses for. (which is what I'm doing now with an ER-X)

                      That's pretty valid.

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                      • J
                        jt1001001
                        last edited by

                        So if you have Windows DHCP handing out IP's for BYOD devices, you need to have CAL's for them? Did not know that, but looking at it makes sense as the BYOD device is using a resource form the server. Got to re-think some of our deployments

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                        • D
                          Dashrender @jt1001001
                          last edited by

                          @jt1001001 said in Unifi switch - tagged traffic issues:

                          So if you have Windows DHCP handing out IP's for BYOD devices, you need to have CAL's for them? Did not know that, but looking at it makes sense as the BYOD device is using a resource form the server. Got to re-think some of our deployments

                          Yep, something I learned a few years ago here or ML.

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                          • S
                            scottalanmiller @jt1001001
                            last edited by

                            @jt1001001 said in Unifi switch - tagged traffic issues:

                            So if you have Windows DHCP handing out IP's for BYOD devices, you need to have CAL's for them? Did not know that, but looking at it makes sense as the BYOD device is using a resource form the server. Got to re-think some of our deployments

                            Yes, if you are using Windows Servers... everything that talks to them needs a CAL, either machine CALs or User CALs. Windows Servers are very limiting on the license front, people often overlook just how much cost and exposure they end up with when using them.

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                            • D
                              Dashrender
                              last edited by

                              The problem I'm trying to solve is that my Mitel phones, that are manually configured to be on VLAN 2, are not communicating to anything else on my network.

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                              • D
                                Dashrender
                                last edited by

                                Found the problem - the uplink from my Unifi to my core switch, VLAN 2 wasn't allowed on the connection.

                                Enabled VLAN2, problem solved.

                                Aww the little things.

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                                • J
                                  JaredBusch @Dashrender
                                  last edited by

                                  @Dashrender said in Unifi switch - tagged traffic issues:

                                  Found the problem - the uplink from my Unifi to my core switch, VLAN 2 wasn't allowed on the connection.

                                  Enabled VLAN2, problem solved.

                                  Aww the little things.

                                  on which switch.

                                  Also, reinforcing the issue with VLAN complicating things.

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                                  • D
                                    Dashrender @JaredBusch
                                    last edited by

                                    @JaredBusch said in Unifi switch - tagged traffic issues:

                                    @Dashrender said in Unifi switch - tagged traffic issues:

                                    Found the problem - the uplink from my Unifi to my core switch, VLAN 2 wasn't allowed on the connection.

                                    Enabled VLAN2, problem solved.

                                    Aww the little things.

                                    on which switch.

                                    Also, reinforcing the issue with VLAN complicating things.

                                    The core switch, in my case an HP 2824.

                                    I don't disagree that VLANs can/do add complication. But in this case it was pre-existing complication that I had to work through, not remove at this point.

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