Okay, I’ve been watching lots of YouTube videos about switches and I’ve just made myself more confused. Managed versus unmanaged seems to be having a GUI versus not having a GUI, but why would anyone want a GUI on a switch? Shouldn’t your router do that? Also, a switch is like a tube station for local traffic, essentially an extension lead, so why do some have fans?

  • chiisana
    link
    fedilink
    English
    88 months ago

    There is only one router on your network. It routes traffic from one machine to another. This is typically also the gateway, and it only has so many ports.

    If you want more physical devices connected to your network, you’d need switches to fan out your network.

    Un-managed switches essentially takes packets from one port and pass them through another port, easy peasy, nothing fancy.

    Managed switches, however, can do more than just take packet from one port, then push it out to the other side. You can set up link aggregation for example, allowing more throughput by using two or more ports to go to the same destination (maybe for example a central file server). You can have L2 vs L3 switches so they route differently. You can have multiple paths to reach another machine, for redundancy but must implement STP to prevent broadcast loops etc.

    Once your network grows larger than just Internet for a couple of desktops, it gets a lot more interesting.

    • @[email protected]OP
      link
      fedilink
      English
      18 months ago

      Thank you. So based on this, shouldn’t things like OpenWRT and OPNSense be made for switches rather than routers? Since the switch seems to be doing all the heavy lifting.

      • chiisana
        link
        fedilink
        English
        38 months ago

        If you use everything from the same vendor, you could manage them in one place (see Ubiquiti’s UniFi stack as example), but at the end of the day, they serve different purposes and target different parts of your network.