Smaller hubs could use a 1Gbps bearer, but this will reduce future expansion options. Use a bearer with the required maximum bandwidth, but is flexible enough to support actual use.
#Install network connect install
You should install a resilient high speed internet link of 10Gbps. Installing external connectivity to a shared building Shared building local area networks (LAN) Shared building wide area networks (WANs) Also, make sure devices are set up to encrypt their data traffic or that encryption occurs at the entry point to a network rather than on the network. You must only allow authorised and authenticated devices to access network management interfaces. You should not trust a network based on its locality When installing your IT system assume that:Įxternal and internal threats always exist on the network To maintain the flexibility and security of the building’s network infrastructure you must treat it as a zero trust network and a separate environment to your IT systems. Refer to the Government Property Agency (GPA), part of the Office of Government Property (OGP) for more details on the Government Hubs programme. Inet6 fe80::47cf:a2e4:af0b:b7cd/64 scope linkĭefault via 192.168.0.1 dev eno1 proto dhcp src 192.168.0.15 metric 203ġ92.168.0.0/24 dev eno1 proto dhcp scope link src 192.168.0.You must follow this guidance if you are refurbishing an existing office space, building new office space or moving to a hub building. 3: eno1: mtu 1500 qdisc fq_codel state UP group default qlen 1000 15 on "eno1" and three inet6 addresses, but apart from that the result is quite the same as with above "ip"-hack. I will try netctl, though.Īnd right now I have booted with systemd and have dhcpcd started. Maybe I was lucky, but it is good news that you can hack around under systemd and inet6. 16 in my address is just any (free) number, and 192.168.0.1 should always be the gateway. With a working ping and the mirrorlist in /etc/pacman.d/ you have all you need for pacman or pacstrap.Īnd yes, I saw a kernel message renaming eth0 to enoxxx, so you have to check first with "ip link" what interfaces are already set up by systemd. And you can stop it cleanly with "dhcpcd -x". So this is instructive, but "dhcpcd" is faster to type, and probably more robust. It took me quite some time to test this out (ip link help, ip address help, ip route help.). The "ip" commands activate the link, choose an address and define a local (subnet) and then a default gateway. By loading this module I get a eth0 link (no, don't look for it in /dev). Instead of using dhcpcd, I can also connect from zero with: modprobe e1000eĮ1000e is a "Network Driver", says modinfo. I even used "watch ip address" to see how fast these inet and inet6 addresses pop up. Just type "dhcpcd" as a command, wait a few seconds, and then "ip route" or "ping 8.8.8.8" to check if it works. This worked on the spot for me AFTER installation. Archlinux says, try dhcpcd in case your installer can't connect automatically.