Office1:
ISP gave pppoe usename password, on sfp, public static IP, xxx.yyy.zzz.111
Office2:
Same ISP gave pppoe usename password, on sfp, public static IP, xxx.yyy.zzz.222.
Office1 and office 2 are connected to ISPs company, fiber is going into his firm.
How to use eoip but using sfp to sfp connection, to have speed provided by sfps and not słów speed based on internet?
I want trafić from Office1 to office2 go through sfps connection through isps device, not through internet.
How he can do it for me if he gave me only public static IPS and indont know what are those sfp ports local IPs?
Talk to ISP. Just because you have two connections from them, doesn’t mean that there’s unfiltered access between them. In fact, I’d expect that by default there isn’t.
I asked and guy told me that it should work because there is nothing set, no firewall etc.
He is also using mikrotik.
Maybe he does not know what to do…
What should be enabled on his side?
If you would be ISP provider, and client would want to do such thing, lets say you are also using mikrotik and you have both sfps of your client connected to one device.
What should be enabled on client side and on server side for it to work?
If it’s all connected and there’s really no filtering, then technically you could simply add some addresses to sfp interfaces (e.g. 10.0.0.1/30 on one router and 10.0.0.2/30 on the other) and they should be able to communicate (so you can use them as endpoints for tunnel). Although it’s not ideal for you to choose something, as it might conflict with something used by ISP.
Are office 1 and office 2 in 2 completely different locations? Or are they in same building?
If same building, are they plugging into the same NTU (same ISP device) for internet?
If they are on separate NTU’s - or in different locations, then it is entirely likely they are not part of the same broadcast domain, and your ISP would need to bridge them together in some way.
You’ll need to provide more information on the hardware physical topology so we can give you a more solid answer.
In general to your question though, if you add an IP address on the SFP port on both ends, it should not affect anything to do with your internet - as the ppp connection will be providing the internet IP, default route, and your NAT statements should be using the ppp interface. So as a simple test, you should be save to add (as another poster suggested) 10.0.0.1/30 on one, 10.0.0.2/30 on the other, and see if they can ping each other.
Ok, i did that.
And routers were visible for each other, i could poing them, create eoip link.
But this eoip link based on local addresses 10.x
was slower than eoip link based on public static ips.
On local copying files from nas was about 18MB/s
on public ips 22MB/s
If I put myself in the shoes of your ISP, if (for example) I make you pay for 200Mbps
and you, even if for an oversight of mine, you start making more with some tricks, without ask first,
I would block both contracts and ask you for damages.