Mainstay
Well-Known Member
- Reaction score
- 747
Hi All,
I am upgrading the security at a small resort / lodge. It was discovered that every room has an Ethernet jack that directly connects the guest to the private resort network (yikes!).
I know I can physically block these ports and/or simply not connect those jacks to anything, but I'd like to keep that functionality should WiFi drop in the resort.
I will be isolating Guests connections on the Wireless network using Ubiquiti equipment, but have not had to work with isolating wired connections before.
Should I simply install a UBNT managed switch and configure each port as its own VLAN? We are only talking 12 suites, so 12 ports ID'd to their proper rooms and operating in VLAN 1, 2, 3 - 12?
Or is there an easier and / or better practice that I should be following?
Thank you all!
--Matthew
I am upgrading the security at a small resort / lodge. It was discovered that every room has an Ethernet jack that directly connects the guest to the private resort network (yikes!).
I know I can physically block these ports and/or simply not connect those jacks to anything, but I'd like to keep that functionality should WiFi drop in the resort.
I will be isolating Guests connections on the Wireless network using Ubiquiti equipment, but have not had to work with isolating wired connections before.
Should I simply install a UBNT managed switch and configure each port as its own VLAN? We are only talking 12 suites, so 12 ports ID'd to their proper rooms and operating in VLAN 1, 2, 3 - 12?
Or is there an easier and / or better practice that I should be following?
Thank you all!
--Matthew