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Hi
We are setting up a new satelite office in an area which only has 512K broadband available and we also need a fast upload speed to our main office. After looking at various options we thought we would go for bonded broadband as we also want to use IP phones. We would want to bond 4 adsl lines. So the question is what hardware do we need to achieve the bonded solution and how easy is it to set up? My boss wants to stay with our current isp who do not yet offer a bonded solution so we won't get any help off them. I have seen that we could download a Linux solution but the most popular seems to be a Cisco 2610xm router with option cards in. Does anyone know what cards we would need (I presume 2 x WIC-1ADSL which is only 2 adsl sockets so that is confusing)? I have set up Cisco routers in the past so have half an idea of whats involved but not set a solution like this. Also how would a vpn be handled given that we have 4 lines with 4 IP addressess when a vpn is ip to ip. Any help would be most appreciated. Paul Edwards Paul Edwards |
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#2
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"Paul Edwards" <(E-Mail Removed)> wrote in message
news:(E-Mail Removed)... > Hi > > We are setting up a new satelite office in an area which only has 512K > broadband available and we also need a fast upload speed to our main > office. > > After looking at various options we thought we would go for bonded > broadband as we also want to use IP phones. We would want to bond 4 adsl > lines. > > So the question is what hardware do we need to achieve the bonded solution > and how easy is it to set up? > > My boss wants to stay with our current isp who do not yet offer a bonded > solution so we won't get any help off them. > > I have seen that we could download a Linux solution but the most popular > seems to be a Cisco 2610xm router with option cards in. Does anyone know > what cards we would need (I presume 2 x WIC-1ADSL which is only 2 adsl > sockets so that is confusing)? I have set up Cisco routers in the past so > have half an idea of whats involved but not set a solution like this. > > Also how would a vpn be handled given that we have 4 lines with 4 IP > addressess when a vpn is ip to ip. > > Any help would be most appreciated. For a true bi-directional bonded solution you will need the ISP to participate. Try http://aaisp.net and look at the Firebrick product. We currently have 3x2Mbps lines bonded using an aaisp/firebrick aolution and it works well. All lines participate in the same IP block, VPN shouldn't be an issue though we don't use it any more ourselves. |
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#3
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Alastair <(E-Mail Removed)> wrote:
> "Paul Edwards" <(E-Mail Removed)> wrote in message > news:(E-Mail Removed)... >> Hi >> >> We are setting up a new satelite office in an area which only has 512K >> broadband available and we also need a fast upload speed to our main >> office. <snip> > For a true bi-directional bonded solution you will need the ISP to > participate. > Try http://aaisp.net and look at the Firebrick product. > > We currently have 3x2Mbps lines bonded using an aaisp/firebrick aolution and > it works well. All lines participate in the same IP block, VPN shouldn't be > an issue though we don't use it any more ourselves. But, not for a satellite office, where you can have your own hardware at each end, for that, any ISP may work well, assuming quotas et al match. (I don't know of hardware) |
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#4
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"Paul Edwards" <(E-Mail Removed)> wrote in message news:(E-Mail Removed)... > Hi > > We are setting up a new satelite office in an area which only has 512K > broadband available and we also need a fast upload speed to our main > office. > > After looking at various options we thought we would go for bonded > broadband as we also want to use IP phones. We would want to bond 4 adsl > lines. > > So the question is what hardware do we need to achieve the bonded solution > and how easy is it to set up? > > My boss wants to stay with our current isp who do not yet offer a bonded > solution so we won't get any help off them. > > I have seen that we could download a Linux solution but the most popular > seems to be a Cisco 2610xm router with option cards in. Does anyone know > what cards we would need (I presume 2 x WIC-1ADSL which is only 2 adsl > sockets so that is confusing)? I have set up Cisco routers in the past so > have half an idea of whats involved but not set a solution like this. > > Also how would a vpn be handled given that we have 4 lines with 4 IP > addressess when a vpn is ip to ip. > > Any help would be most appreciated. > > Paul Edwards As far as I know you'll need the ISP to be involved. I've set them up through Nildram before who charge about £10 a month extra for the bonding service. They use Cisco routers at their end to allow the lines to effectively become one and have the same IP or IP range. We've used small cisco routers for two lines and the larger rackmount models for 4 - (I forget the exact models). Works well but remember that at some point the lines WILL go down and leave you high and dry. If you rely on these for everything, you need to accept that there may be a few days where you just can't work. |
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#5
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Paul Edwards wrote:
> We are setting up a new satelite office in an area which only has 512K > broadband available and we also need a fast upload speed to our main office. with the recent launch of MaxDSL your assumption may no longer hold. Max Premium offers "up to 832k upload" on a single line and the downstream is very likely to be more than 512k as Max does rate adaption. Even the Home version of Max has "up to 448k" upstream. > After looking at various options we thought we would go for bonded broadband > as we also want to use IP phones. We would want to bond 4 adsl lines. > So the question is what hardware do we need to achieve the bonded solution > and how easy is it to set up? A PC with the downloaded Linux image from http://www.freestuffjunction.co.uk/out.php?id=1940 and four Snagoma modems would do. But I doubt you still need 4. > My boss wants to stay with our current isp who do not yet offer a bonded > solution so we won't get any help off them. no MLPPP bonding for you then. Try http://www.sharedband.com/index2.html which is ISP independent. http://www.xifos.net/dsl.php http://www.ukfsn.org/adsl/bonded.html > Also how would a vpn be handled given that we have 4 lines with 4 IP > addressess when a vpn is ip to ip. 4 lines with MLPPP bonding only have one single IP address. We run three 2M lines into one fo the above pseudo-open-source routers. Phil |
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#6
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On 5 Apr 2006, Ian Stirling wrote:
> But, not for a satellite office, where you can have your own hardware at > each end, for that, any ISP may work well, assuming quotas et al match. That's not correct. For bonded broadband you need an ISP that support MLPPP on their broadband product. Otherwise you only have multiple separate connections which means you don't get the benefits of bonding. We offer bonded ADSL services. We have some customers using Sangoma ADSL cards (which we sell) with our unmanaged solution and others using Cisco routers which are supplied with the managed solution. Both work well. Jason Clifford -- UKFSN.ORG Finance Free Software while you surf the 'net http://www.ukfsn.org/ up to 8Mb ADSL Broadband from just £14.98 ** FREE ADSL MIGRATION ** http://www.linuxadsl.co.uk/ ADSL Routers from just £21.98 |
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#7
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On 5 Apr 2006, PhilT wrote:
> > We are setting up a new satelite office in an area which only has 512K > > broadband available and we also need a fast upload speed to our main office. > > with the recent launch of MaxDSL your assumption may no longer hold. > Max Premium offers "up to 832k upload" on a single line and the > downstream is very likely to be more than 512k as Max does rate > adaption. Even the Home version of Max has "up to 448k" upstream. If he can only get 512K on his line he is very unlikely to get a significant increase in upload speeds by switching the the MAX product. Jason Clifford -- UKFSN.ORG Finance Free Software while you surf the 'net http://www.ukfsn.org/ up to 8Mb ADSL Broadband from just £14.98 http://www.linuxadsl.co.uk/ ADSL Routers from just £21.98 |
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#8
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Jason Clifford <(E-Mail Removed)> wrote:
> On 5 Apr 2006, Ian Stirling wrote: > >> But, not for a satellite office, where you can have your own hardware at >> each end, for that, any ISP may work well, assuming quotas et al match. > > That's not correct. > > For bonded broadband you need an ISP that support MLPPP on their broadband > product. Otherwise you only have multiple separate connections which means > you don't get the benefits of bonding. No, you don't. You need enough bandwidth between the two points, and some hardware bond the channels at each end. The OP explicitly said that it was to run a VPN to a remote office. At the satellite office, you have a smart router, that presents the VPN at one end, and connects to many ADSL modems. (or has them internally). This simply splits the traffic over the VPN between the ADSL links, possibly prioritising some based on quotas. Then the reverse at the other end. This has no downside over a proper MLPPP solution, for VPN links. You only need MLPPP if you require high bandwidth to the net as a whole. |
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#9
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Jason Clifford wrote: > If he can only get 512K on his line he is very unlikely to get a > significant increase in upload speeds by switching the the MAX product. disagree. There are so many times the BT checker undershot the mark that the "can only get 512k" message is no firm indication of what the line is actually capable of and even that is only a reference to downstream - most lines show a healthy SNR margin for upstream and the early reports from MaxDSL users are all showing the full 400k+ upload. Lines listed as "1M only" are capable of over 5 Meg down and 1M up, for example. Phil |
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#10
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Ian Stirling wrote:
> You need enough bandwidth between the two points, and some hardware bond > the channels at each end. > The OP explicitly said that it was to run a VPN to a remote office. > > At the satellite office, you have a smart router, that presents the VPN > at one end, and connects to many ADSL modems. (or has them internally). > > This simply splits the traffic over the VPN between the ADSL links, > possibly prioritising some based on quotas. > > Then the reverse at the other end. > This has no downside over a proper MLPPP solution, for VPN links. > You only need MLPPP if you require high bandwidth to the net as a whole. http://www.firebrick.co.uk/faq-bonding.html That's well worth a read, if a little biased. -- <http://ale.cx/> (AIM:troffasky) ((E-Mail Removed)) 19:56:15 up 5 days, 4:44, 2 users, load average: 0.33, 0.25, 0.14 This is my BOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOMSTICK |
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