"TimsPod" <(E-Mail Removed)> wrote in message
news:F99DD746-9F79-422E-B6A5-(E-Mail Removed)...
> greetings everyone - i find myself in a quandry as my company attempts to
> consolidate workspace by merging workers from 3 floors (each with its own
> separate departmental windows network and IP segment) into 2 floors. each
> network is its own, self-contained windows network. here is a brief overview
> of the networks and segments:
>
> [1] MY windows 2000 active directory (wins, dhcp, dns)
> - full class c segment #x.x.76.x
> - floor #16
>
> [2] a SAMBA network (linux/samba PDC, wins & dhcp)
> - half of a class c segment (128 addresses) #x.x.78.x
> - half of floor #17.
>
> [3] I believe to be a Windows NT4 network (a PDC with at least wins & dhcp)
> - full class c segment #x.x.79.x split on floors #17 & 20 along with the
> appropriately configured routers on each of the two floors for segment
> #x.x.79.x.
You are making more of this than there needs to be. When consolitdating into a
smaller portion of a building:....
1. Operating systems don't matter at all - (taken in the proper context)
2. Applications don't matter at all - (taken in the proper context)
3. Users don't matter at all - (taken in the proper context)
4. IP Classes *really* don't matter at all
5. Segments are *not* the primary means of security although it needs to be kept
in consideration
You can stick everything into one segment as long as you stay less than 245
Hosts.
So take the number of Hosts,...divide by 254 and round up the next whole
number,...that will be the minimum number of segments you need.
You can add more segments if security demands it,...but don't "over-assume" on
that,...the primary means of security (when looked at correctly) is in *this*
priority order:
1. Permissions built into the Applications that are used
(Web Service, FTP Service, SQL Service, Custom written & Vendor
Applications)
2. Share Permissions
3. NTFS Permissions
4. Layer 3 & 4 ACLs (segmentation)
Just because a user is on the same segment does *not* mean they have "access" to
something. Security by segmentation is *last* and it very "rough & crude" by
comparison to the other methods and is not very granular,...and when *over used*
will simply break things more often that it helps anything.
The *primary* purpose for segmentation is Broadcast Control,...hence the 245
Host ceiling. Once that number is past, the normal Ethernet Broadcasts begin to
take their "toll" on the LAN's efficiency.
--
Phillip Windell [MCP, MVP, CCNA]
www.wandtv.com
The views expressed (as annoying as they are, and as stupid as they sound), are
my own and not those of my employer, or Microsoft, or anyone else associated
with me, including my cats.
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