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Forum Discussion
blentz
May 11, 2024Tutor
vlan slow
i have 4 switches 1 in each of 4 buildings. I have the standard default vlan 1 and an additional vlan 10 configured. On switch 1 and switch 4, there is a U port configured for VLAN 10 - on all 4 switches, there are T ports configured to move the traffic from switch 1 all the way to switch 4.
On switch 1, there is a starlink modem plugged into the U port. On switch 4, there is a router plugged into the U port
The router sees the starlink modem, but the traffic is so slow, it fails the ping test and disables the WAN connection. If i plug a laptop into the U port in place of the router, the laptop fails to see the DHCP server on the starlink modem.
I have changed around using different switch ports to troubleshoot with no success - i am stumped - i could use some help. The funny thing is , this used to work but stopped about a week ago. i have swapped out 2 of the 4 switches with no fix. I guess the last thing to do is swap out each of the 2 remaining switches to see if we have a bad switch? All the traffic on all 4 switches for vlan 1 work fine - no speed issues.
That fixed it! - un real - why did it ever work? Crazy technology - switch should not allow that option.
Thank you!
8 Replies
- blentzTutor
The VLAN10 configuration looks correct. The issue must be in the VLAN 1 configuration.
Have by accident defined the VLAN 1 on the same ports in use for the VLAN in use for the Starlink LAN? This would cause what is named an asymmetric VLAN config, but not supported on any Netgear switch, but not disallowed or warned on some of the Plus switches Web UI. This could cause the issue you describe. Some or all of the untagged frames end in the wrong VLAN, the some of the return traffic will flow in the wrong path.
A word on nomenclature: Starlink Modem? Something that does not exit in the Starlink marketing or support terms. Starlink Gen 2 and 3 have an Ethernet port (for SL Gen 1 require a proprietary Ethernet adapter), this is either configured as a NAT router (so with a DHCP server assigning private RFC1918 LAN IP addresses). Alternate config option (typically used on deployments with user supplied NAT routers or Mesh systems) is naming this as Bypass mode. Technically similar to a DSL modem.
Regards,
-Kurt.
PS. Will request a moderator moving this thread to the more appropriate Plus And Smart Switches Forum to Discuss Smart Switches (T) and Plus Switches (E), including Local and Remote Management
- blentzTutor
What would you look at on the vlan 1 config?
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