Years ago I was responsible for consolidating three separate office locations into a new, larger, office.
We had some on-premise hosting, and I figured the easiest thing would be to keep the existing network LAN addressing. Each LAN had a different IP range, so it would be no problem for them to share the same ethernet network, as long as only one of the three LANs provided DHCP for the PCs.
We already had a Cisco router for internet access. That should be able to provide routing between our three LANs, right?
That was a terrible idea, as local traffic was bottlenecked on this small router that wasn't designed for the job. Transfers between LANs were as slow as they'd been when we in different physical locations.
I spent an hour or two consolidating the LAN onto a single IP subnet, and everything worked as you'd expect.
We had some on-premise hosting, and I figured the easiest thing would be to keep the existing network LAN addressing. Each LAN had a different IP range, so it would be no problem for them to share the same ethernet network, as long as only one of the three LANs provided DHCP for the PCs.
We already had a Cisco router for internet access. That should be able to provide routing between our three LANs, right?
That was a terrible idea, as local traffic was bottlenecked on this small router that wasn't designed for the job. Transfers between LANs were as slow as they'd been when we in different physical locations.
I spent an hour or two consolidating the LAN onto a single IP subnet, and everything worked as you'd expect.