alternative_access
Differences
This shows you the differences between two versions of the page.
Both sides previous revisionPrevious revisionNext revision | Previous revision | ||
alternative_access [2025/01/04 15:09] – bent | alternative_access [2025/01/04 18:48] (current) – bent | ||
---|---|---|---|
Line 7: | Line 7: | ||
But, but, but. There is always the chance that the fiber is cut, e.g. when somebody starts digging without having obtained proper information on what already may be buried in the ground (power cables, antenna cables, telephone cables , water piping, sewage piping, you name it) | But, but, but. There is always the chance that the fiber is cut, e.g. when somebody starts digging without having obtained proper information on what already may be buried in the ground (power cables, antenna cables, telephone cables , water piping, sewage piping, you name it) | ||
- | So the idea arose of having another way of connecting to the internet in case the fiber connection for whatever reason stopped functioning. This note describes how this alternative Internet access way is constructed. | + | So the idea arose of having another way of connecting to the internet in case the fiber connection for whatever reason stopped functioning. |
+ | * It allows connecting to the Internet from the LAN for browsing, email etc. The details on how this is done in practice are [[redundancy|Redundancy]] | ||
+ | * By itself it doesn' | ||
+ | |||
+ | This note describes how this alternative Internet access way is constructed. | ||
===== Physical Inplementation ===== | ===== Physical Inplementation ===== | ||
Line 13: | Line 17: | ||
The access device used is an USB stick (dongle), in casu a Huawei E3372 LTE modem. A SIM card from [[https:// | The access device used is an USB stick (dongle), in casu a Huawei E3372 LTE modem. A SIM card from [[https:// | ||
- | A good question is: where to place the dongle: In the primary (fiber) router or in a separate router dedicated to the purpose. The answer in this situation became a separate router because having to distinct router gives an extra degree of redundancy | + | A good question is: where to place the dongle: In the primary (fiber) router or in a separate router dedicated to the purpose. The answer in this situation became a separate router because having to distinct router gives an extra degree of redundancy. |
+ | The alternative router is a RaspberryPi 3B running " | ||
+ | |||
+ | The primary router is a 3-port APU2E5 from [[https:// | ||
===== Routing ===== | ===== Routing ===== | ||
- | [[Alternate address|Alternate routed address space]] | + | Once decided to have two routers on the LAN you have to use a routing protocol in order to keep the routers updater on each other. The general routing protocol setup is described in [[setup: |
+ | |||
+ | We have decided to solely use IPv6 for this function. Each of us have delegated a /64 sub-domain of our IPv6 allocation to the other. We have also set up routing tables so that connection requests to this sub-domain are routed through the tunnel back to the other. | ||
+ | |||
+ | The details of the sub-allocation and the routing is described in [[Alternate address|Alternate routed address space]] | ||
===== DNS considerations ===== | ===== DNS considerations ===== | ||
+ | |||
+ | Connecting back to our servers through the tunnel does not require actions beyond what is described above. If, however, it should be necessary to use the sub-delegated addresses as source address for sending mail, further action is required. | ||
+ | |||
+ | In order to have our sent email properly accepted by foreign mail server it is necessary to provide reverse name lookup for the mail servers. For practical reasons we decided to delegate the administration of the delegated sub-domain to the one that uses it. Details of the name space delegation is described in [[cross-allocation|IPv6 Cross allocation]] | ||
alternative_access.1736003375.txt.gz · Last modified: 2025/01/04 15:09 by bent