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Wireless link test bed #2
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There was also an idea of running a monitoring screen at the donated space. This may be a great way to get tech people to notice that there is something exciting happening there and study the information provided on it. |
After discussion with @Pedro-on-a-bike and @darkdrgn2k, I would like to recommend this set up for home user installations as well:
Devices: Radio, one of:
Network switch:
For internet-sharing (althea-babel):
For in-mesh peer-to-peer applications (ipfs, ssb over cjdns, yggdrasil):
Notes:
Organizational tasks:
Please 👍 or 👎 to this proposal and sign up for the website task. |
Solution to broadcast domain problem By isolating each switch on its own broadcast domain, and using the non-bridged interfaces on the Boards, we can prevent the antennas from bridging over each other while still allowing to share the connection. This can be done in one of two ways Option 1 - Separate physical switches Connect a separate physical switch to each antenna and connecting and each board to each antenna using a separate port on the Boards Pros
Option 2 - Managed Switch VLAN on swithes - quick overview NOTE many devices have ability to "mix" both types of modes. Untagged packets are processed as Untagged and Tagged as Tagged. Solution: Board connect in one of to ways
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This is a summary of a recent discussion on #deployment:tomesh.net involving @darkdrgn2k @Pedro-on-a-bike and @Shrinks99. The short term plan is to put up directional Ubiquiti antennas to form a stable 100+ Mbps point-to-point wireless link between two venues. Connect each one to a gigabit switch, so the assembly can serve as a test bed for plugging in single-board computer nodes running various mesh software (e.g. cjdns, althea, batman-adv, tomesh's prototype, mesh-orange, etc.) and they can run in parallel sharing the wireless link.
We want to think of setting up this initial link, and further extending this radio network, as a separate project from the ongoing work on node software development. This is a shared resource to be housed in donated space, and will serve as test bed for running our semi-permanent nodes in a monitored environment.
The basic test bed setup consists only of one or more Ubiquiti antenna and a gigabit switch. We would like this equipment to be accessible to Toronto Mesh members such that we can plug in other devices to test using this shared link.
The following should be discussed with potential partners donating space to host our test bed setups:
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