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Switches Between Cable Modem and Router?

Hey folks -

I'm looking for some guidance on a small project I have here at home.  Currently, my Cisco DPC3010 cable modem is connected directly to one of the Ethernet ports on my Linux router.  All works quite well that way.  However, I'm curious to know if there's some what to separate the router and cable modem over 2 switches?

I'll 'splain.

The coax enters the house in my living room and connects to the CM there.  The router is also sitting in the living room, and it's connected to a Cisco SG200-18 switch.  I have Ethernet running from my living room to my basement, where a Cisco SG500-24 switch sits.  The two switches are connected via a 2xGigE port channel.

I want to move the router into the basement.  Ideally, I'd like to move the CM down there with it, but I don't have the necessary coax run.  So for now, that's out.  But... can I go from something like this:

--coax----- Cable Modem ---GigE----- Router ---GigE---- SG200-18 ===2xGigE==== SG500-24

To something like this:

--coax----- Cable Modem ---GigE-----  SG200-18 ===2xGigE==== SG500-24 ---GigE----- Router

I tried it, complete with a separate VLAN specifically for the CM traffic.  And the VLAN was properly trunked between the two switches.   But for some reason, the router was unable to communicate via IP to the upstream.  I'm not sure if there are config bits I need to set on the SG200 that the CM is connected to?  I thought I'd read somewhere that CMs don't like broadcast technology such as LLDP and/or CDP, so I disabled both of those on its port.  Did I miss something else perhaps?  Or am I trying to do the impossible?

For what it's worth: the IP connectivity is static.  There's no DHCP running between my router and the upstream cable provider.  The cable modem is literally acting as a L2 coax-->Ethernet convertor, more or less.

Any ideas?  Thanks!

jas

3 Replies 3

Giuseppe Larosa
Hall of Fame
Hall of Fame

Hello Jas,

an RJ-45 crossover cable between CM and first switch may be of help as both are likely acting like a switch side.

Hope to help

Giuseppe

Giuseppe Larosa wrote:

an RJ-45 crossover cable between CM and first switch may be of help as both are likely acting like a switch side.

Good thought, but the switch has auto-MDI/MIDX ports, and link comes up between the two without any problem.

Peter Koltl

Peter Koltl

Peter Koltl

Peter Koltl wrote:

Check  whether the modem's and router's MAC addresses show up in either  switch's dynamic MAC table in the right VLAN. - See more at:  https://supportforums.cisco.com/thread/2201982?tstart=0#sthash.kBgAgFRW.dpuf

Check whether the modem's and router's MAC addresses show up in either switch's dynamic MAC table in the right VLAN.

Both MACs were seen in the proper VLAN on each switch.  L2 connectivity was good.

As an experiment on the router, I set a static ARP entry for its default route (which is the cable company's router on the other side of the cable modem) using the CM's MAC.  I didn't think that would work, and sure enough: it didn't.

jas

Peter Koltl
Level 7
Level 7

Some cable modems send BPDUs (like a switch) which your switch might not like.

Check whether the modem's and router's MAC addresses show up in either switch's dynamic MAC table in the right VLAN.

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