I have a restaurant with a network consisting of a Meraki Z3 and 5 Unifi PRO AP's. This is hardware that was provided by my POS company, of which I have taken over network support. I have a guest network SSID created on the APs through the Unifi cloud controller. The Wireless networks are non-existent in the Meraki dashboard. I want to create a different subnet so customers can't access my LAN, and so I don't run out of available IP addresses. I have over 100 reserved for my POS system, printers, Smart TVs, etc.
I can't set up a Meraki Guest network on an SSID because it currently shows no active SSIDs. If I do it on the Unifi controller, I'm pretty sure it won't work since the Meraki is handling all of the IP addresses.
Does anyone have any suggestions on the best way to set this up? Maybe a VLAN (but on the Meraki or on the Unifi controller?).
The meraki is just plugged into a Netgear ProSafe GS728TP PoE switch..nothing special. I'm not a network guy, just wondering if there was something simple I could do with what I have. If I go another route, I will likely switch over to Ubiquiti.
As @NolanHerring said the Z3 might not be what you need. Unless you're gonna split SSID's by VLAN which I know you said you're not a network guy and I'm not too sure about what that Netgear is capable of but try not to overcomplicate it by doing anything over the top as far as configs.
I have done this with a MX and Unifi, but it should work similar with a Z3
You need to create a Guest VLAN in the Z3. I use VLAN 10 and then 10.10.10.0/24 typically (DHCP is auto on)
Then go into Unifi controller, go under settings, then networks. Create a new network (VLAN)
Below are the settings I use most of the time. 10.10.10.1 is the MX/Z3 IP for the VLAN you created
No but in this situation there is a dumb switch between the AP and the MX, so you may need to tag the port the AP is using on your smart switch
It sounds like you go Z3 -> Netgear switch -> APs. Is that correct?
If so, did you run vlans on your Netgear switch as well as on the Z3? Netgear has some okay instructions, and iirc that model ought to support vlans if you can log into the switch to manage it.
If you don't have creds for the switch, try the default. If that fails you, there's always factory reset and rebuild. If you're not comfortable with networking, you maybe don't want to do that.
It is a good idea not to mix the sheep with the goats.
I have a heterogenic network stack made up of a melange of Meraki and UniFi kit.
There are 3 security appliances (1 x MX, 1 x Z3C, 1 x UniFi USG).
The network schema is analagous to an onion with differing layers (onion skins) wrapped around each other.
Each security appliance controls its own switches and WiFi APs. Each security appliance has its own autonomous WiFi subsystem with separate secure and Guest SSIDs. Guest SSIDs are configured as isolated and pass guest originated traffic through to the internet whilst preventing guest users from accessing any local networks and devices, or other guest users.
This sounds more complicated than it is, it is solid and survives month in, month out, without maintenance. Which isn't to say that I don't weed out abusive guest users from time to time.
Hi there,
The Z3 is really meant to be used as a teleworker gateway device at home or when traveling so you can connect to it and have a VPN tunnel back to a VPN head-end at a datacenter and access company resources. It is meant for up to 5 clients - your phone, laptop, maybe a tablet. It's not meant to be an edge device or firewall for a substantial network. Depending on how many client devices you're needing to support on the network, you'd be better off with an MX64/65/67/68 (up to 50 clients) or MX84 (up to 200 clients) if you're planning for growth. The MXs are more expensive than the Z3, but are 100% better suited to be an edge firewall. It sounds like you have over 100 devices so an MX84 should be the ticket.