You can do your own tests before putting switch in productionOk, I understand. Network admins are to blame for using Mikrotik! Agree !
Yes, I can. But many times, problems come after a while, after you make test -> instability.You can do your own tests before putting switch in productionOk, I understand. Network admins are to blame for using Mikrotik! Agree !
Exactly. MT team did some tests, decided to start to sell it, problems come after those tests ))Yes, I can. But many times, problems come after a while, after you make test -> instability.You can do your own tests before putting switch in productionOk, I understand. Network admins are to blame for using Mikrotik! Agree !
Easy solution, buy equipment from another companyYes, I can. But many times, problems come after a while, after you make test -> instability.You can do your own tests before putting switch in productionOk, I understand. Network admins are to blame for using Mikrotik! Agree !
Another thing: you buy some products and on tests you realise that they have issues. And you loose a lot of time. More, you need to send them back, but some companies do not take items back (bad luck).
It wouldnt be easier that these equipments would do what they say they do? I dont say that they should have zero issue. I say that there are way to many bugs ! Bugs that could be handled in the testing labs in the first place, by hardware/network enginners.
I realise now that some of you really like to be lab rats.
It doesn't matter because we do not discuss admin abilities. It's about Mikrotik which should do its job right.Network admins don't blindly reboot a switch and upgrade firmware in a mission critical environment.
People with switch credentials that shouldn't have them do that quite often though. Then they don't perform effective troubleshooting, and complain when something doesn't behave as expected.
Please define your standards, because 'doing the job right' is vague and subjective.What does 'doing the job right' mean? Can you provide an example of a company that develops software that you think 'does the job right?'It doesn't matter because we do not discuss admin abilities. It's about Mikrotik which should do its job right.
Flapping ports does not necessarily indicate a switch problem. You have provided no details on why you believe the switch is the cause of the problem. Are you saying that somehow Mikrotik switches and Mikrotik cables (I didn't know they made cables) are incompatible, because that's the implication.I am not saying that Mikrotik/RouterOS should have ZERO bugs.
There is no perfect network equipment (or other type of it&c item). Any vendor releases sometimes update, security patches etc.
But flapping ports between Mikrotik switches with Mikrotik cables? What the hell is this ?!
I am not talking only about my problems, but look how many users report mikrotik issues. And I am not talking about sophisticated situations, but simple bugs that should never exists on released products.
And btw, I refer to Mikrotik hardware+software, not only software.
I disagree. Mikrotik is perfectly fine in mission critical environments if the device(s) have the features required for that environment and implemented properly. That means hardware and software validation in a lab scenario that mimics the production environment the equipment will ultimately be deployed in. There is no way around that. All mission critical environments do this with all of their gear before going into production. They also usually have redundant routers (VRRP), redundant switches (STP), and redundant connections (MS teaming, VMWare vswitches) to servers.You are absolutely right, that's what I've said in another topic: Mikrotik is NO good for critical environments.
For home use, small offices and other, are perfect ! And cheap !
Once again, go buy equipment from another vendor if you are not satisfied (now I sound like my ISP representative).Creatin, what a stupid answer!
He is absolutely right about making us beta testers where MT is used in many production environments. MT software development is an example how to make it wrong with no respect to users. It would be interesting to find out how they (not) test their software before releasing it to public. Their products are fantastic but the part of it, ROS development and testing, is some kind of a joke. I am looking forward to see they will understand it some day and do important changes to the process.
Is your brain at 100% stuck ? )Well stated tippenring!!
@hostclub, I think you missed the point, which was if your not a properly trained switch manager you have no business being involved in switch infrastructure of any significance. So suggest you take your own advice and stick to home installs......
By the posts and advice you write I believe your knowledge of MT could be used in some companiesI've given my input, I know my limitations when it comes to using MT (barely good enough to deploy at home), takes others longer to figure it out I guess.
Yes, I think anav underestimates his skillset, while others overestimate theirs.By the posts and advice you write I believe your knowledge of MT could be used in some companiesI've given my input, I know my limitations when it comes to using MT (barely good enough to deploy at home), takes others longer to figure it out I guess.
You two really need to get a room....As long as you understand each other so damn wellBy the posts and advice you write I believe your knowledge of MT could be used in some companiesI've given my input, I know my limitations when it comes to using MT (barely good enough to deploy at home), takes others longer to figure it out I guess.
That is so strange. I'm in the US. I have installed around 100 (mostly) routers for clients over about the last 5 years or so. Most are either RB2011, 3011, 4011, or CCRs.Reality is: Mikrotik should do a better job at quality control. A lot better.
I am in far from a big Mikrotik client with around ~ 100 routers and ~200 access points, but still I had to RMA close to 10 routers for various reasons, ranging from DoA to flapping ports and mysterious crashes. Another 5 still pending investigation with lots of packet loss and 3 just quit working out of warranty. ~15% is a lot from my point of view.
Good part: they are pretty cheap compared to their competition.
I'm curious, on your routers experiencing packet loss, do you have a firewall rule that drops invalids in the forward chain? If so, I'd be curious to see what happens if you disable that rule.Another 5 still pending investigation with lots of packet loss and 3 just quit working out of warranty.
Reality is: Mikrotik should do a better job at quality control. A lot better.
I am in far from a big Mikrotik client with around ~ 100 routers and ~200 access points, but still I had to RMA close to 10 routers for various reasons, ranging from DoA to flapping ports and mysterious crashes. Another 5 still pending investigation with lots of packet loss and 3 just quit working out of warranty. ~15% is a lot from my point of view.
Good part: they are pretty cheap compared to their competition.
Using switches also, but very few, so cannot really comment on those.Folosesti si switchuri Mikrotik ?
Will try and get back with results.I'm curious, on your routers experiencing packet loss, do you have a firewall rule that drops invalids in the forward chain? If so, I'd be curious to see what happens if you disable that rule.Another 5 still pending investigation with lots of packet loss and 3 just quit working out of warranty.
In my opinion Mikrotik does a good job, but not a great one.
We choose their products for the features and the low prices.
But what do you do as a network admin when you realise that a 48 port switch installed in a rack, that connects 30 servers, is not working (traffic not passing, flapping ports, instable uplink ports...and all other issues seen on this forum) ?!
Well, you first reboot it. Then you try and update the switch. And then another reboot. Finnaly you decide to change the switch with other vendor ! Will you trust to install again that mikrotik item ?
No! you dont !
I understand that there are 1 million of situations and you can not make all tests in your labs !
But, please, do more tests with your products in your labs before release them on the market ! Customers are not lab rats !
Thank you for your words! It’s so true.In my opinion Mikrotik does a good job, but not a great one.
We choose their products for the features and the low prices.
But what do you do as a network admin when you realise that a 48 port switch installed in a rack, that connects 30 servers, is not working (traffic not passing, flapping ports, instable uplink ports...and all other issues seen on this forum) ?!
Well, you first reboot it. Then you try and update the switch. And then another reboot. Finnaly you decide to change the switch with other vendor ! Will you trust to install again that mikrotik item ?
No! you dont !
I understand that there are 1 million of situations and you can not make all tests in your labs !
But, please, do more tests with your products in your labs before release them on the market ! Customers are not lab rats !
In general I can agree with that (I am just now in the process of migrating some internal systems at $dayjob from SuSE 10.0 to something current) but you should also consider that waiting too long to upgrade can also make it more painful to finally do so.I'm a network engineer at $dayjob, and my motto is simple: don't upgrade unless you *must*. And 'must' means one of two things: 1) there turns up a colossal security hole in the software you're running (and it must be in functionality you actually use) or 2) newer software has functionality you absolutely can't live without.
In general I can agree with that (I am just now in the process of migrating some internal systems at $dayjob from SuSE 10.0 to something current) but you should also consider that waiting too long to upgrade can also make it more painful to finally do so.