Not a net ops person but I had to change my WiFi router MAC to the one from the ISP to make it work
Comment on My self-hosted home setup
tiller@programming.dev 1 year agoWIth my previous ISP, I swapped the ISP’s router with my OpenWRT’s and everything worked fine. With my current ISP, it appears that it’s not that simple to swap the router altogether. But I’ll be honest, the biggest factors are price and number of routers/switch. As I want 2.5gbps, I’d need a router with at least dual 2.5gbps ports. The WIFI6 offering is also quite nice. And if I can’t swap my ISP router, it would just add another device. In a perfect world, I’d have a single router running openwrt, with wifi6 and couple of 2.5+gbps ports (but unfortunately openwrt doesn’t play nice with most wifi6 routers and these routers can get very expensive) For now, my ISP router does the job and I haven’t had any issue (yet)
ddx7@lemmy.world 1 year ago
bemenaker@lemmy.world 1 year ago
Also trying calling them, if you give them your mac they can put it in the system, and then it will work. Time Warner used to be big on mac filtering.
ElderWendigo@sh.itjust.works 1 year ago
You could spend a little for a prosumer router and AP. I have a very similar setup with a cable modem, edge router X (ubnt), a single UniFi AP, and a service running on my server (this could be replaced with a separate hardware device or Raspberry Pi, but the server is going to be running anyway).
foggenbooty@lemmy.world 1 year ago
What are too currently using for your OpenWRT router? I just got one of these and I would highly recommend it: a.aliexpress.com/_mq4HxaS
Get the N100 barebones version because you can slap an SSD and RAM in there for cheaper and have more selection. It has four 2.5Gb NICs and the internal PCIE slot for a WiFI card if you really want, though I would recommend getting a Ubiquiti AP to go along with it.
You can put OPNsense on it bare metal, or proxmox and then run your network related VMs there instead of your main server. Your choice.
tiller@programming.dev 1 year ago
I got a Netgear AC2000 (R6850) for cheap on sale, and it’s been working flawlessly so far