Okay, let me bounce this off you guys. I have a campus network consisting of 7 major buildings, and I need to design a backbone for it. All of the buildings are connected by fiber, but it is not a full mesh. If you drew seven squares on a page and connected them all in a circle you would have a pretty good picture of the fiber runs. By patching fiber through some of the buildings I can actually connect my 2 "core" switches which are at opposite ends of the campus to 2 distribution switches in each building.
There are an average of 3 network closets per building and about 3500 ports througout the campus. There are WAN links to corporate in 2 of the seven buildings (same buildings I plan on putting the core switches into), and one of those contains file and print servers for the campus.
C---C
/\ / \
/ X / /\ / / \ / / \ / / \ \
/ / \ D D D D
/ \ / \ / \ / / X \ / X A A A A A A
"C" = core switch - 4500 or 6500
"D" = distribution switch - 3550-12G ?
"A" = access switch - probably 3550
"X" is just a crossover
(Who needs Visio?)
Okay, enough about the physical topology. The current IP design has 4 VLANs based on administrative boundaries. This means that 2 buildings sometimes share a single VLAN. The LAN is layer 2 - all intervlan routing is done by a one-armed 7206.
Here's my question (finally!). I am considering implementing putting 2 3550-12G switches in each plant. I will have each of those connected back to different "core" switches - maybe back to both of them (dual-path). I would like to redesign the IP structure to break it up and to segment it more along physical boundaries rather than political ones. However, if I implement layer 3 in the distribution switches I think I've got to subnet more than I want to, causing administrative hassels, DHCP scopes everywhere, etc. Layer 2 at the distribution layer seems like it would be a lot easier to manage.
What are your thoughts on on layer 2 vs. layer 3 LAN topologies? All of this needs to support VoIP too.
-JD
There are an average of 3 network closets per building and about 3500 ports througout the campus. There are WAN links to corporate in 2 of the seven buildings (same buildings I plan on putting the core switches into), and one of those contains file and print servers for the campus.
C---C
/\ / \
/ X / /\ / / \ / / \ / / \ \
/ / \ D D D D
/ \ / \ / \ / / X \ / X A A A A A A
"C" = core switch - 4500 or 6500
"D" = distribution switch - 3550-12G ?
"A" = access switch - probably 3550
"X" is just a crossover
(Who needs Visio?)
Okay, enough about the physical topology. The current IP design has 4 VLANs based on administrative boundaries. This means that 2 buildings sometimes share a single VLAN. The LAN is layer 2 - all intervlan routing is done by a one-armed 7206.
Here's my question (finally!). I am considering implementing putting 2 3550-12G switches in each plant. I will have each of those connected back to different "core" switches - maybe back to both of them (dual-path). I would like to redesign the IP structure to break it up and to segment it more along physical boundaries rather than political ones. However, if I implement layer 3 in the distribution switches I think I've got to subnet more than I want to, causing administrative hassels, DHCP scopes everywhere, etc. Layer 2 at the distribution layer seems like it would be a lot easier to manage.
What are your thoughts on on layer 2 vs. layer 3 LAN topologies? All of this needs to support VoIP too.
-JD