Hello,
I am not new to networking but i just started at a new company that is somewhat in a transition of network topology. Basically the way things work or are currently setup is we have branch locations that route in on a vpn to a switch which route into a sonicwall then out to the world.
The branches are on the cloud already but our corporate devices are 2960x's and some HP's. My main question is this, how can i add my new MS425 to the cloud without affecting any kind routing. I want to get it setup and configured but not affect anything until I am ready.
Thanks, sorry for the noob question.
Solved! Go to solution.
Hi @edunnington,
The beauty of Meraki is that you can configure the device itself in the dashboard before it is unboxed and connected. If you'd like to check your configurations are correct or test them beforehand, you should be able to configure an open port (assuming you have one) on the SonicWall, plug your new MS into it to get it connected and allow the config to push down to the device.
Hi @edunnington,
The beauty of Meraki is that you can configure the device itself in the dashboard before it is unboxed and connected. If you'd like to check your configurations are correct or test them beforehand, you should be able to configure an open port (assuming you have one) on the SonicWall, plug your new MS into it to get it connected and allow the config to push down to the device.
Expanding on this because this idea does sound better. I would want to create the ability to basically only communicate with cisco cloud and thats it.
Is there any information out there regarding this? Maybe what to allow, do a basic ACL or something on that port and deny everything but cisco stuff.
@edunnington, if you already have your dashboard setup with the device added...
You can go to Help > Firewall Info and it should show you exactly what is needed for cloud connectivity for the devices within your Meraki network. (I realize this may only be the single MS that you have)
If you have an Internet connection you use for testing (not connected to the rest of your network) you could also use that. If you have a 1000BaseT SFP you could also take it home and plug it in there ...