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RV345 behind Huawei HG659 causing issues - possible solution ?

jezmeister6
Level 1
Level 1

Hey folks,

Had a long-term issue which I've been slogging every so often to sort out and finally seems like it's an issue with the Huawei modem not bridging correctly.
Here's a (hopefully clear) map of what I have:

Network_Map.jpg 

Essentially I have a single internet FTTB coming in to a consumer Huawei HG659 for a shared office, two companies, A and B.

A only uses wireless

B only uses ethernet

I need to keep the two effectively separate.

I had hoped that bridge mode on the Huawei and either auto-IP or PPPoE on the RV345 would've have been an easy solution, but seems that the PPPoE setting is asking the ISP to supply 2 PPPoE sessions or 2 Wan IP's which they don't do. However, after some digging I should be able to set the Huaweii into 'connect with another modem mode' and then set the ISP username/pwd in the RV345 using PPPoE.

 

Question - the ISP requires VLAN 2 tagging - where does this get set in the PPPoE settings ? Is this different to VLAN 2 in my LAN ?

 

So, assuming that works, which will cut off the wireless side of the Huaweii - I'm thinking I can just get a cheapo wireless AP, plug that into one of the RV345 LAN sockets, set that socket to a separate subnet/vlan for the Office A people and all good ?

 

Appreciate any thoughts.

Much thanks

Jerry

 

1 Accepted Solution

Accepted Solutions

Martin Aleksandrov
Cisco Employee
Cisco Employee

Hi there,

 

If your ISP requires that the device connecting to their network need to set a VLAN tag on packets on the WAN (Internet) connection of the router then you can do a WAN sub-interface VLAN tagging on the router: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rioHY8P5PoY 

 

As for the second question - that is correct you should be able to do SSID to VLAN mapping with most of the wireless access points and separate your network to a number of VLANs (including guest Wi-Fi). We would recommend some of the new Cisco Business Access points that support mesh and can be directly managed through the CBD (Cisco Business Dashboard). https://www.cisco.com/c/en/us/products/cloud-systems-management/business-dashboard/index.html

 

Regards,

Martin

 

 

View solution in original post

4 Replies 4

jezmeister6
Level 1
Level 1

As an update to this - TPG suggest upgrading to a business plan and having static IP will solve this issue. 
Not sure about this ?
yes I can change the RV345 to Static WAN IP instead of DHCP or PPPoE but not sure that's going to fix getting VPN through to the NAS

Martin Aleksandrov
Cisco Employee
Cisco Employee

Hi there,

 

If your ISP requires that the device connecting to their network need to set a VLAN tag on packets on the WAN (Internet) connection of the router then you can do a WAN sub-interface VLAN tagging on the router: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rioHY8P5PoY 

 

As for the second question - that is correct you should be able to do SSID to VLAN mapping with most of the wireless access points and separate your network to a number of VLANs (including guest Wi-Fi). We would recommend some of the new Cisco Business Access points that support mesh and can be directly managed through the CBD (Cisco Business Dashboard). https://www.cisco.com/c/en/us/products/cloud-systems-management/business-dashboard/index.html

 

Regards,

Martin

 

 

Hey thanks for that Martin that was super helpful info to add to the mix.

 

After much testing myself and subsequent wrangling with the ISP yesterday it seems that the issue is with their handling of shared IP addresses as I couldn't even access the remote admin for router or modem when direct entering the public IP from outside. This experience has also made me aware of the shortfalls in consumer internet plans and restrictive supplied hardware vs business plans/hardware.

Thanks again for your knowledge and help.

 

 

You are welcome!