Hi,
My thought is that you might be better with a different router that has a different switch chip. (eg. A Hap AC^2)
With these switch chips, you can set the bridge to be fully hardware forwarding, using switch rules to kick selected switched packets to the
CPU. (It then hits the bridge configuration of the CPU, and you can kick it again into the router section)
So the CPU is only doing work for those packets.
And the CPU on the Hap AC^2 is quite a bit faster than the hex.
If multiple vlans are being switched, things are possibly less easy.
My thought is that you might be better with a different router that has a different switch chip. (eg. A Hap AC^2)
With these switch chips, you can set the bridge to be fully hardware forwarding, using switch rules to kick selected switched packets to the
CPU. (It then hits the bridge configuration of the CPU, and you can kick it again into the router section)
So the CPU is only doing work for those packets.
And the CPU on the Hap AC^2 is quite a bit faster than the hex.
If multiple vlans are being switched, things are possibly less easy.
Statistics: Posted by rplant — Thu Feb 29, 2024 6:52 am