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Sunday, May 17, 2009

Client PC's Redundancy: Wireless LAN

Yellow Flowers (DSCN0947)
Yellow Flowers (DSCN0947),
originally uploaded by Li-Ji.
To provide Client PCs with network backup redundancy, Wireless LAN has a unique advantage that all Wired LAN cannot provide at all: Automatic Recovery! Windows will do this by itself to find another available "Access Point", automatically! That's why I emphasize Automatic Recovery: user will not even notice the network has been down for a moment because of single network device's failure, when all the client PCs use Wireless LAN only to connect to the network!

However, Wireless LAN today still has it technical limitation of "Bandwidth". This problem would become more serious if client PCs are located densely close to each other, and each client PC runs applications consuming lots of bandwidth. Using Wireless LAN only on client PC would now be a nightmare for network administrators, if the client PCs should be arranged in this way!

I have another suggestion for you. We can use Wireless LAN as a backup redundancy to Wired LAN, so we can take both technology's benefit at the same time. In the normal scenario the whole traffic goes through Wired LAN. Once the Switch fails, client PCs divert traffic to Wireless LAN for backup. Although at this backup time the network would still be slow because of Wireless LAN's limitation, at lease we can still keep full connectivity to all client PCs.

Can the switchover be automatic, too? Sure! The trick is to make use of "more specific routes"! Assume the Intranet is within the "192.168.0.0/16" range. We first separate both Wired LAN and Wireless LAN into different network of addressing. Then we point the route to "192.168.0.0/255.255.0.0" on Windows to the gateway IP address of Wired LAN, and point the "default route" to the gateway IP address on Wireless LAN side.

You see it! In normal time traffic would go through more specific route through Wired LAN. Only when Wired LAN is down would traffic go through Wireless LAN. Automatically done!

As how to add those two routes in client PCs, we can make use of Window's AD Group Policy. Or even simpler, we just use DHCP to insert the two routes into client PCs.

I believe some of you might come up with another question: this solution only solves the "Intranet" automatic back redundancy. How about the traffic to the Internet?

The trick is very similar. Let me take a breath and you keep watching my blog! I will tell you in my next post!
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