Thank you Nicolas,

What I mean is that if I do the setup ad you said, so ISP ROUTER Lan [eth] First LiMe router Wan and then First LiMe router Lan [eth] other LiMe router's LAN ports, if I connect a wired client [say a desktop pc] to that huge Lan, it will receive several DHCP broadcasts. This might not be an issue as you're saying since they all advertise the same stuff, but I don't understand how all LiMe nodes can apparently respond to 10.13.0.1 on that **wired** network. I know about the trick on the wireless / Lan side of every node, and I've always found it a genius trick, I just don't understand how it can work to connect several LANs together over wired, especially since they all try to have the same IP.

In any event, this setup has an issue whereby DHCP advertisements [if that's what they're called] of LiMe nodes connected lan-to-lan travel upwards through the wan port of the first lime node [the one connected to the ISP router via its wan port, as you suggested] and confuses the ISP router itself, to such point that my ISP router wasn't managing to connect upstream to the VDSL endpoint, and was not connecting to the public facing internet. As soon as I disconnected the cable going from the ISP router's LAN port to the first lime node's wan port, the ISP router started working again.

Also, as soon as we figure this stuff out, and I understand it [hardest part ;], I volunteer to write a fully detailed guide on how to design a lime topology so that our design works all across the world, and deployers like me know how to engineer their networks.

Thanks again to both of you

Nk


From: Nicolas Pace <nico@libre.ws>
Sent: Jul 3, 2017 10:20 AM
To: Nk; libremesh users
Subject: Re: [lime-users] DHCP conflicts

On July 2, 2017 8:31:44 PM GMT+03:00, Nk via lime-users wrote: > Thank you Nicolas, so what you're saying is that instead of > connecting > the ISP router to the switch, and then having cables from the switch > going either to the wan port of LiMe routers [if they have one] or to > their Lan port [if it's the only one they have], I should connect the > ISP router directly to the wan port of a LiMe router that has both, > such as a 1043 or a C7, and then connecting all other nodes to that > device's Lan ports, or, should they not suffice, draw a cable from > that > router's LAN port to the switch, and then connect all other devices > to > the switch, is this correct? So, from my point of view, best possible scenario is for all libremesh routers to be connected via cable through the LAN sockets. If they are too far to reach via a cable (+100m) i would use Wifi. > This way, you say, only the first LiMe router receives the external > DHCP. But still there are multiple advertisements. Not in the same network. You have one DHCP in the outside network between the ISP Gateway and the first LibreMesh router, and you have a cloud of LibreMesh DHCP routers in the other network. > Is this not a > problem any more since they are all the same, is this your point? Yes > > But still, how can all LiMe routers on that wired network have > the 10.13.0.1 IP at that point though? That is a 'trick' of the LibreMesh Routers... they announce the same Gateway IP, that is a local IP of each router, to allow Roaming devices between Access Points.