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    Cellular backup options

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    • scottalanmillerS
      scottalanmiller @AdamF
      last edited by

      @AdamF said in Cellular backup options:

      @scottalanmiller said in Cellular backup options:

      @AdamF said in Cellular backup options:

      What is the physical connection layout for the Cradle point? I understand that the static IP block that I have from Comcast would NOT work during a failover scenario. I can deal with that. However, under normal operation (not in LTE failover), is this configured in such a way that creates double NATing? We have VoIP phones connecting to a cloud PBX, and I would not want to deal with double NAT.

      I've not tested with static, but the assumption would be that the static would still work.

      I just heard from my rep. Static IPs will not work during LTE backup. Once normal service is restored, the IPs are available again, but not during the LTE backup.

      Oh, too bad. Not a huge deal in most cases, but not ideal.

      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
      • DashrenderD
        Dashrender @AdamF
        last edited by Dashrender

        @AdamF said in Cellular backup options:

        @scottalanmiller said in Cellular backup options:

        @AdamF said in Cellular backup options:

        What is the physical connection layout for the Cradle point? I understand that the static IP block that I have from Comcast would NOT work during a failover scenario. I can deal with that. However, under normal operation (not in LTE failover), is this configured in such a way that creates double NATing? We have VoIP phones connecting to a cloud PBX, and I would not want to deal with double NAT.

        I've not tested with static, but the assumption would be that the static would still work.

        I just heard from my rep. Static IPs will not work during LTE backup. Once normal service is restored, the IPs are available again, but not during the LTE backup.

        I'm really not surprised by this - Making your IPs work across different networks is a pretty huge deal.

        Personally - I just want the same IP (the one assigned by cellular) when I'm on cellular everytime - that way a backup VPN route can be setup to that IP, or whitelisted in firewalls for things like PBX's, etc.

        scottalanmillerS 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
        • scottalanmillerS
          scottalanmiller @Dashrender
          last edited by

          @Dashrender said in Cellular backup options:

          @AdamF said in Cellular backup options:

          @scottalanmiller said in Cellular backup options:

          @AdamF said in Cellular backup options:

          What is the physical connection layout for the Cradle point? I understand that the static IP block that I have from Comcast would NOT work during a failover scenario. I can deal with that. However, under normal operation (not in LTE failover), is this configured in such a way that creates double NATing? We have VoIP phones connecting to a cloud PBX, and I would not want to deal with double NAT.

          I've not tested with static, but the assumption would be that the static would still work.

          I just heard from my rep. Static IPs will not work during LTE backup. Once normal service is restored, the IPs are available again, but not during the LTE backup.

          I'm really not surprised by this - Making your IPs work across different networks is a pretty huge deal.

          Personally - I just want the same IP (the one assigned by cellular) when I'm on cellular everytime - that way a backup VPN route can be setup to that IP, or whitelisted in firewalls for things like PBX's, etc.

          That's where more robust VPN design comes into play. Like having a central controller like ZeroTier, or a hub and spoke where you reach out to a central point. End points connecting directly to each other with no coordination is a fragile design.

          AdamFA 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
          • AdamFA
            AdamF @scottalanmiller
            last edited by AdamF

            @scottalanmiller Yeah, Our team, when working from home, likes to RDP into their PCs at the office. They use either traditional VPN, or Zerotier. Some of them claim to have issues with Zerotier, claiming it is "slow" for them. I never use traditional VPN anymore and I only use Zerotier if I have to RDP to anything at the office. I never experience slowness of any kind with Zerotier.

            dbeatoD 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
            • dbeatoD
              dbeato @AdamF
              last edited by

              @AdamF said in Cellular backup options:

              @scottalanmiller Yeah, Our team, when working from home, likes to RDP into their PCs at the office. They use either traditional VPN, or Zerotier. Some of them claim to have issues with Zerotier, claiming it is "slow" for them. I never use traditional VPN anymore and I only use Zerotier if I have to RDP to anything at the office. I never experience slowness of any kind with Zerotier.

              Yeah, change is "hard" 🙂

              AdamFA 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
              • AdamFA
                AdamF @dbeato
                last edited by

                @dbeato said in Cellular backup options:

                @AdamF said in Cellular backup options:

                @scottalanmiller Yeah, Our team, when working from home, likes to RDP into their PCs at the office. They use either traditional VPN, or Zerotier. Some of them claim to have issues with Zerotier, claiming it is "slow" for them. I never use traditional VPN anymore and I only use Zerotier if I have to RDP to anything at the office. I never experience slowness of any kind with Zerotier.

                Yeah, change is "hard" 🙂

                🙂 Zerotier is was such a game changer for us. Remember the old MPLS / pay a fortune days? DO NOT miss those.

                scottalanmillerS 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                • scottalanmillerS
                  scottalanmiller @AdamF
                  last edited by

                  @AdamF said in Cellular backup options:

                  @dbeato said in Cellular backup options:

                  @AdamF said in Cellular backup options:

                  @scottalanmiller Yeah, Our team, when working from home, likes to RDP into their PCs at the office. They use either traditional VPN, or Zerotier. Some of them claim to have issues with Zerotier, claiming it is "slow" for them. I never use traditional VPN anymore and I only use Zerotier if I have to RDP to anything at the office. I never experience slowness of any kind with Zerotier.

                  Yeah, change is "hard" 🙂

                  🙂 Zerotier is was such a game changer for us. Remember the old MPLS / pay a fortune days? DO NOT miss those.

                  I've never had to deal with that. We had better options than MPLS before MPLS hit the market. Even by 2000 we had ways to handle that stuff well without MPLS.

                  AdamFA 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                  • scottalanmillerS
                    scottalanmiller
                    last edited by

                    For those wondering, MPLS was proposed in 1997 and defined in 2001. But IPSec VPN was 1995 and other VPNs were older.

                    1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                    • AdamFA
                      AdamF @scottalanmiller
                      last edited by

                      @scottalanmiller said in Cellular backup options:

                      @AdamF said in Cellular backup options:

                      @dbeato said in Cellular backup options:

                      @AdamF said in Cellular backup options:

                      @scottalanmiller Yeah, Our team, when working from home, likes to RDP into their PCs at the office. They use either traditional VPN, or Zerotier. Some of them claim to have issues with Zerotier, claiming it is "slow" for them. I never use traditional VPN anymore and I only use Zerotier if I have to RDP to anything at the office. I never experience slowness of any kind with Zerotier.

                      Yeah, change is "hard" 🙂

                      🙂 Zerotier is was such a game changer for us. Remember the old MPLS / pay a fortune days? DO NOT miss those.

                      I've never had to deal with that. We had better options than MPLS before MPLS hit the market. Even by 2000 we had ways to handle that stuff well without MPLS.

                      Yeah I only dealt with MPLS in a larger global company I worked for previously. They spend SOOO much money on AT&T managed WAN connections. Like insane amounts of money.

                      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
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