Upgrade from 5 to 13 static IP addresses
04-10-2018, 12:42
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#1
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cf.member
Join Date: Oct 2018
Services: Voom Fibre Option 3, 13 static IP addresses
Posts: 22
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Upgrade from 5 to 13 static IP addresses
Hello internet!
Just a general question.... I've got an upgrade from 5 to 13 static IP addresses booked in for tomorrow. I know from looking at the Hitron unit that it's just a username and password for the GRE tunnel, but does anyone know why they'd need an engineer visit?
I have got the credentials for the GRE tunnel from VMB (the new details for the 13 static IP's) and I've even tried to update them on the Hitron unit myself, but unsurprisingly they do not work. I guess that the visit is just a quality assurance thing, and that perhaps the engineers "enable" the new IP's before configuring the unit. There's also been mention of them needing to replace the Hitron unit to make the upgrade possible.
In any case, it appears I cannot use the new details yet until the engineers visit and "flick the switch" remotely.
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04-10-2018, 14:47
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#2
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cf.addict
Join Date: May 2010
Location: PO9 - Havant
Services: Vodafone 80x20 Backup, MixTV & V6, Vivid 350, Hub3 & RT-AC87u
Posts: 126
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Re: Upgrade from 5 to 13 static IP addresses
No help in regards to the question whatsoever - But why on earth would anyone need 13! IPs? (genuinely curious...)
If port forwarding is used correctly, there's never much need, to my knowledge...
Tom
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04-10-2018, 14:59
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#3
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cf.member
Join Date: Oct 2018
Services: Voom Fibre Option 3, 13 static IP addresses
Posts: 22
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Re: Upgrade from 5 to 13 static IP addresses
Quote:
Originally Posted by SirThomas
No help in regards to the question whatsoever - But why on earth would anyone need 13! IPs? (genuinely curious...)
If port forwarding is used correctly, there's never much need, to my knowledge...
Tom
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I'm using all 5 of my currently assigned addresses - I use them to segregate different services. Got a web server running off one, a PBX for my house on another, an SFTP server on another, some other bits on the last few (including my firewall for my home network)
I could use port forwarding, but for some of these things I like to have them exposed fully to the internet without running them on seemingly random ports. Plus not having to fiddle around with NAT is good (for the PBX at least).
Having all those things behind their own firewalls and separated from my home network is what I need.
I could easily get by with just a single dynamic IP, but owing largely to my job, having this fancy setup works a treat.
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04-10-2018, 15:13
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#4
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cf.addict
Join Date: May 2010
Location: PO9 - Havant
Services: Vodafone 80x20 Backup, MixTV & V6, Vivid 350, Hub3 & RT-AC87u
Posts: 126
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Re: Upgrade from 5 to 13 static IP addresses
Quote:
Originally Posted by crowarth
I could easily get by with just a single dynamic IP, but owing largely to my job, having this fancy setup works a treat.
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Duly noted, always interesting to know
Tom
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04-10-2018, 15:41
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#5
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Dr Pepper Addict
Cable Forum Team
Join Date: Oct 2003
Location: Nottingham
Age: 61
Services: Flextel SIP : Sky Mobile : Sky Q TV : VM BB (1000 Mbps) : Aquiss FTTP (330 Mbps)
Posts: 27,717
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Re: Upgrade from 5 to 13 static IP addresses
Why do you run a web server (and other servers) from home as opposed to just using VPS's ?
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04-10-2018, 16:03
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#6
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cf.member
Join Date: Oct 2018
Services: Voom Fibre Option 3, 13 static IP addresses
Posts: 22
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Re: Upgrade from 5 to 13 static IP addresses
Quote:
Originally Posted by Paul M
Why do you run a web server (and other servers) from home as opposed to just using VPS's ?
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I used to, but I prefer the level of control/access that hosting it myself provides. I'm also not limited by any restrictions on the platform the VPS would be living on such as disk space, CPU, RAM. The only limits are whatever I set based on the hardware I use. Bandwidth isn't an issue either - the 350 down / 20 up is sufficient.
I'm also not hosting anything for anyone other than myself (bar one small community website), so I don't have any SLA's to worry about, or things like power cuts, downtime on the connection, etc.... As I mentioned earlier, my job is one of the biggest reasons I have the setup I do. I work as a network engineer for a large health company with 7 sites spread across the EU, so having all this is basically like having a lab for me to experiment in and test stuff.
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04-10-2018, 21:10
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#7
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cf.geek
Join Date: Jun 2008
Posts: 804
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Re: Upgrade from 5 to 13 static IP addresses
Quote:
Originally Posted by crowarth
Hello internet!
Just a general question.... I've got an upgrade from 5 to 13 static IP addresses booked in for tomorrow. I know from looking at the Hitron unit that it's just a username and password for the GRE tunnel, but does anyone know why they'd need an engineer visit?
I have got the credentials for the GRE tunnel from VMB (the new details for the 13 static IP's) and I've even tried to update them on the Hitron unit myself, but unsurprisingly they do not work. I guess that the visit is just a quality assurance thing, and that perhaps the engineers "enable" the new IP's before configuring the unit. There's also been mention of them needing to replace the Hitron unit to make the upgrade possible.
In any case, it appears I cannot use the new details yet until the engineers visit and "flick the switch" remotely.
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Technically you can do it yourself with no issues. But your public IP range will change completely - as they will allocate blocks for the 5 & 13 address blocks from different pools. And while you can reconfigure that yourself, they always seem to want an engineer to do it to avoid any issues.
Your GRE tunnels credentials shoudln't change just the IP allocation that you get via that tunnel. They shoudln't need to replace the Hitron as the same device works for 13, 5, 1 or even Dynamic addressing.
The other thought is that they might do this with a service cease and re-provide and swap the unit as part of that, but again no real need. VMB would need to update your static IP config on their end before the new IP range will work, so again this coudl be a reason for an engineer visit -to co-ordinate both changes together.
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05-10-2018, 20:33
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#8
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cf.member
Join Date: Oct 2018
Services: Voom Fibre Option 3, 13 static IP addresses
Posts: 22
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Re: Upgrade from 5 to 13 static IP addresses
Quote:
Originally Posted by ccarmock
Technically you can do it yourself with no issues. But your public IP range will change completely - as they will allocate blocks for the 5 & 13 address blocks from different pools. And while you can reconfigure that yourself, they always seem to want an engineer to do it to avoid any issues.
Your GRE tunnels credentials shoudln't change just the IP allocation that you get via that tunnel. They shoudln't need to replace the Hitron as the same device works for 13, 5, 1 or even Dynamic addressing.
The other thought is that they might do this with a service cease and re-provide and swap the unit as part of that, but again no real need. VMB would need to update your static IP config on their end before the new IP range will work, so again this coudl be a reason for an engineer visit -to co-ordinate both changes together.
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So they've been and done the work today. They replaced the Hitron unit, and the GRE credentials were different (already knew that though). So looks like a service cease and re-provide as you suggested.
They also no longer take the old equipment away as the engineer said to me that they'd been told not to take the old unit away and to leave it with the customer. Same for the residential modems (although he did tell me he only did the business installs). So now I have an old Hitron modem that I was told to dispose of. Might take it apart and see what's in it. The one they replaced it with was slightly different in that it had 4 ports for the VOIP/telephony service, with my current one only having 2. No big deal as I don't use that anyway.
No issues with the visit and service works as it did before, albeit with a different and larger (13 instead of 5) block of IP's. Few hours re configuring kit with the new IP ranges, and all is well.
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05-10-2018, 21:19
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#9
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cf.geek
Join Date: Jun 2008
Posts: 804
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Re: Upgrade from 5 to 13 static IP addresses
Interestign they swapped the Hitron for this. Is it still a CGNV4?
Is the firmware the same? I have: 4.5.10.173-UPC and hardware version 1A
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07-10-2018, 17:43
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#10
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cf.member
Join Date: Oct 2018
Services: Voom Fibre Option 3, 13 static IP addresses
Posts: 22
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Re: Upgrade from 5 to 13 static IP addresses
Quote:
Originally Posted by ccarmock
Interestign they swapped the Hitron for this. Is it still a CGNV4?
Is the firmware the same? I have: 4.5.10.173-UPC and hardware version 1A
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CGNV4-FX4
Hardware Version 2D
Software Version 4.5.10.173-UPC
So far no issues. Connection is solid
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10-10-2018, 07:22
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#11
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Sulking in the Corner
Join Date: Jul 2009
Location: RG41
Services: 1 Gbps; Hub 4 MM; ASUS RT-AX88U; Ultimate VOLT. BT Infinity2; Devolo 1200AV
Posts: 11,955
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Re: Upgrade from 5 to 13 static IP addresses
There will be a whole raft of VMB users on this forum who might be keen to know whether they are worse off with a HW version 1A than a 2D!
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Seph.
My advice is at your risk.
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11-10-2018, 00:47
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#12
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cf.mega poster
Join Date: Sep 2003
Services: Gig1, Hub 5
Posts: 12,040
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Re: Upgrade from 5 to 13 static IP addresses
Quote:
Originally Posted by crowarth
I'm using all 5 of my currently assigned addresses - I use them to segregate different services. Got a web server running off one, a PBX for my house on another, an SFTP server on another, some other bits on the last few (including my firewall for my home network)
I could use port forwarding, but for some of these things I like to have them exposed fully to the internet without running them on seemingly random ports. Plus not having to fiddle around with NAT is good (for the PBX at least).
Having all those things behind their own firewalls and separated from my home network is what I need.
I could easily get by with just a single dynamic IP, but owing largely to my job, having this fancy setup works a treat.
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VM not complying with RIPE guidelines there accepting that as a valid reason for the IP allocation
Generally speaking you can run a sftp server on the same ip as a webserver, they dont use the same port.
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