O'kay, so it's been a while since I've posted anything. Worse since phase one as been live for a while now. Life keeps getting in the way.
Here's where everything stands:
I took the Linksys WRT54g running dd-wrt that was acting as wireless bridge out of my room and put it in the living room to give a desktop that was moved upstairs from the office a connection. In it's place I put the Netgear GS608, which currently has 7 of 8 ports in use. It's kind of funny that I was advised to just run one drop per room and use a 5 port switch in each room, yet on the one 8 port I've already gotten I'm one port away from being full. The guy that suggested it to me, though, had no idea the amount of hardware I'm running in each room, so I forgive him.
The Linksys WRT54g that was in my son's room along with the cable modem, and primary server were moved down into the basement office. This not only reduces physical access to the equipment, so it'll be more obvious if my son is trying to get around his internet access restrictions, but also puts the equipment in a location which stays cooler all year round. It also has the added benefit of reducing the temp in my son's room by a degree or two. He likes it cold, so he's happier.
That required pulling a new coax line for the modem. I currently have all ports on the WRT54g in use with two rooms, the server, and a workstation in the office. Pulling cat5e to other rooms in the house, as well as second lines to some rooms, will most likely just wait until I can get another switch. It'll be hard to motivate myself to start pulling lines, and drilling holes, when I won't be able to make the jacks live right away. Besides once I start pulling lines I'm going to want to wall fish the stuff I already have pulled at the same time, and I haven't decided on the vendor I want to use for the modular jacks yet, or if I want to put phone and coax in the same boxes.
In my son's room, taking the place of the WRT54g, is an old SMC 5608DS 10/100 hub. Four of those ports are currently in use. He has another device to connect, but it currently doesn't have an ethernet jack. I need to find another USB-ethernet adaptor. I've got one, that's damaged, which I need to repackage. Just want to get another, preferably of the same model, and repack it as well. Main reason I want the same model is that I know that model will do what I need. We'll see if I can find another, preferably cheap.
I'm not sure how I want to progress next. I have at least two more rooms to pull cat5e to, and I might pull more than one line to at least some rooms. Before I can make use of any new lines, though, I have to acquire another switch. That also brings up the question of passing NAT off to the server and using the WRT54g as just an access point... then there's wall fishing what I already have pulled.
As an aside, after moving the server things went very wrong. About every 10 minutes or so the machine kept panicing and restarting. No apparent reason. Fortunately just weeks earlier I had been given another old machine, which actually had a slightly faster CPU (an AMD K6/2 450MHz instead of the K6/2 400), so I pulled out the HD and dropped it in the newer machine along with the NIC, and all was right with the world once more.
I think next still will probably be getting another switch... we'll see.
2.25.2009
1.29.2009
Rusty tools or just rusty operator?
Most of the wiring is done, or at least in so much that the drops are pulled and everything is working. From the start this was always meant to be a work in progress, so things like wall fishing, jacks, and redundant lines will come. Also I have yet to pull any lines into the living room, so at the moment everything there is still wireless.
Still much to do, including some updates to allow a final move away from using WEP anywhere on the network, and hopefully moving 802.11b onto a second router for the occasional PSP or DS usage.
Pulling the drops wasn't so bad. Experience form many years of pulling coax helped. Been a while since I'd crimped a RJ45 connector, but only messed up one. Must make note which way I'm holding the connector when I insert the cable. My bad.
More to come...
Still much to do, including some updates to allow a final move away from using WEP anywhere on the network, and hopefully moving 802.11b onto a second router for the occasional PSP or DS usage.
Pulling the drops wasn't so bad. Experience form many years of pulling coax helped. Been a while since I'd crimped a RJ45 connector, but only messed up one. Must make note which way I'm holding the connector when I insert the cable. My bad.
More to come...
12.23.2008
Original Setup
As this project starts the house network is made up as follows:
Network Hardware:
Motorola SB5120 cable modem
Linksys WRT54G running dd-wrt in gateway mode
Linksys WRT54GS running dd-wrt in router mode as wireless bridge
Server:
AMD K6-2 400MHz 196MB RAM running FreeBSD for DNS, DHCP, NTP, and network storage as well as IPv6 routing
Hosts:
3 TiVos 2 wireless adapters, 1 via wireless bridge
1 Desktop Windows 2K wired
3 Desktops Windows XP 2 wired, 1 via wireless bridge
1 Laptop Windows Vista wireless
1 Laptop FreeBSD wireless
2 Desktops Mac OSX 1 wired, 1 via wireless bridge
1 Laptop Mac OSX wireless
2 PS3 1 wireless, 1 wireless bridge
1 Nintendo DS wireless
1 PSP wireless
1 iPhone wireless
As you can see most of the traffic is passing over wireless, and it was really starting to slow things down more than a little. Especially when the DS, PSP, or FreeBSD laptop is being used as the wireless drops back into b mode. Also as the wireless bridge would not relay IPv6 properly (not a transparent bridge) the XP and OSX machines also had wireless adaptors on them directly for IPv6 only. Their connection to the bridge was to make use of the switch as I transfer a large amount of data between them and the other devices on that switch. Just keeping as much off the wireless as I could.
Also as much of this was put together 'in the moment' over time, it was a little messy. Here are a few pictures of some of the mess.
Network Hardware:
Motorola SB5120 cable modem
Linksys WRT54G running dd-wrt in gateway mode
Linksys WRT54GS running dd-wrt in router mode as wireless bridge
Server:
AMD K6-2 400MHz 196MB RAM running FreeBSD for DNS, DHCP, NTP, and network storage as well as IPv6 routing
Hosts:
3 TiVos 2 wireless adapters, 1 via wireless bridge
1 Desktop Windows 2K wired
3 Desktops Windows XP 2 wired, 1 via wireless bridge
1 Laptop Windows Vista wireless
1 Laptop FreeBSD wireless
2 Desktops Mac OSX 1 wired, 1 via wireless bridge
1 Laptop Mac OSX wireless
2 PS3 1 wireless, 1 wireless bridge
1 Nintendo DS wireless
1 PSP wireless
1 iPhone wireless
As you can see most of the traffic is passing over wireless, and it was really starting to slow things down more than a little. Especially when the DS, PSP, or FreeBSD laptop is being used as the wireless drops back into b mode. Also as the wireless bridge would not relay IPv6 properly (not a transparent bridge) the XP and OSX machines also had wireless adaptors on them directly for IPv6 only. Their connection to the bridge was to make use of the switch as I transfer a large amount of data between them and the other devices on that switch. Just keeping as much off the wireless as I could.
Also as much of this was put together 'in the moment' over time, it was a little messy. Here are a few pictures of some of the mess.
![]() |
| Original Setup |
12.16.2008
New Hardware: Round One
So to start this little adventure I have picked up some hardware that I knew I'd need.
I already had the necessary tools. Sure there are a few things I would like to have, like cables testers, and all that, but I have twisted pair and coax prep and crimp tools.
I picked up an 8 port gigabit switch from Best Buy. Got the Netgear GS608. Someone whose opinion I trust recommended the 5 port version for use in individual rooms, so I figured the 8 port should be good as well. I don't really like the form factor. I'm more of a 'it looks like it belongs in a rack' kind of guy, but at $70 I can't complain too much.
I also grabbed a few patch cables from WalMart at about a dollar a foot. I know I could have gotten them cheaper, but I didn't want to order them and wait. Also some colour coded cable tiles, to make things easier later.
Lastly I went to Home Depot, which apparently sells networking hardware now as well as cables and wall plates. Weird... anyway I grabbed a 500' box of Cat5e for $57 and a 25 count package of RJ45 connectors for $10. Those were the cheapest prices I'd found without having to drive way too far. So what I spent extra I saved in gas. I could have gotten 1k' of cable for $30 more, but I didn't need that much, so it wasn't really saving anything. Ya know?
To follow will be pictures of the old setup, and then some of the new stuff as I do it.
I already had the necessary tools. Sure there are a few things I would like to have, like cables testers, and all that, but I have twisted pair and coax prep and crimp tools.
I picked up an 8 port gigabit switch from Best Buy. Got the Netgear GS608. Someone whose opinion I trust recommended the 5 port version for use in individual rooms, so I figured the 8 port should be good as well. I don't really like the form factor. I'm more of a 'it looks like it belongs in a rack' kind of guy, but at $70 I can't complain too much.
I also grabbed a few patch cables from WalMart at about a dollar a foot. I know I could have gotten them cheaper, but I didn't want to order them and wait. Also some colour coded cable tiles, to make things easier later.
Lastly I went to Home Depot, which apparently sells networking hardware now as well as cables and wall plates. Weird... anyway I grabbed a 500' box of Cat5e for $57 and a 25 count package of RJ45 connectors for $10. Those were the cheapest prices I'd found without having to drive way too far. So what I spent extra I saved in gas. I could have gotten 1k' of cable for $30 more, but I didn't need that much, so it wasn't really saving anything. Ya know?
To follow will be pictures of the old setup, and then some of the new stuff as I do it.
It's time to upgrade
So what's this about?
I've decided to record the progress of upgrading my home network from the 10/100 and 802.11b/g that it is to gigabit and 802.11g only. This will be a piece at a time thing, the end result I hope to be proper wall plates with at least two ports per room (maybe more) along with coax and phone. Tomorrow I'll start the process of documenting the network in it's current form, along with some pictures. Then as I add or change things I'll post the progress of those changes.
Most of my networking knowledge is self taught, so this is just another step in that self teaching process. It's been a while since I've prepped my own RJ45 connections, so this should be fun.
I've decided to record the progress of upgrading my home network from the 10/100 and 802.11b/g that it is to gigabit and 802.11g only. This will be a piece at a time thing, the end result I hope to be proper wall plates with at least two ports per room (maybe more) along with coax and phone. Tomorrow I'll start the process of documenting the network in it's current form, along with some pictures. Then as I add or change things I'll post the progress of those changes.
Most of my networking knowledge is self taught, so this is just another step in that self teaching process. It's been a while since I've prepped my own RJ45 connections, so this should be fun.
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