Getting Started: MikroTik Bridge Configuration

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  • čas přidán 25. 07. 2024
  • This video is aimed at teaching new users to MikroTik how to configure Bridges on RouterOS. In essence a bridge allows you to bundle different interfaces together into a single logical interface. Bridges have various different uses and can help expand your network in very interesting ways.
    For more information on Bridges please visit the MikroTik TOC:
    wiki.mikrotik.com/wiki/Manual...
    Feel free to use the timestamps to skip to any specific section you are interested in.
    EVE-NG Setup:
    • EVE-NG - First Time Co...
    Timestamps:
    00:00 - Intro
    00:38 - Bridge Theory
    05:35 - Bridge Configuration through Winbox
    08:40 - Bridge Configuration through CLI
    Credits:
    Intro Music: Ringtail - Waking Up
    • Ringtail - Waking up
    Thumbnail: Created on Canva
    Let's connect on Social Media!
    🌏 thenetworkberg.com 🌏
    🌏 / thenetworkberg 🌏
    🌏 / bergnetwork 🌏
    🌏 / the-network-berg-39451... 🌏
    Thanks again for watching

Komentáře • 31

  • @blindside995
    @blindside995 Před 3 lety +1

    Fantastic content! Keep it up man

    • @TheNetworkBerg
      @TheNetworkBerg  Před 3 lety

      Thank you for the kind words, it really gives me motivation to create content like this.

  • @paulmacgiollacaoine8619
    @paulmacgiollacaoine8619 Před rokem +1

    Tip of the ice-BERG 😍

  • @drreality1
    @drreality1 Před 3 lety +1

    I'm so grateful for your tutorial
    Subscribed 😉

  • @ashleygraemetari523
    @ashleygraemetari523 Před 3 lety

    Great explanation. Thanks.

  • @BostjanCadej
    @BostjanCadej Před 3 lety +1

    Nice to see you building content from basic to more advanced 👍

  • @maskawathlatifturzo3731

    Great content

  • @alucard77719
    @alucard77719 Před 3 lety

    great work.

  • @schlomoshekelstein908
    @schlomoshekelstein908 Před rokem +1

    i was trying to do this for roughly 2 hours, i watched this video maybe 5 times. couldn't get it to work at all! finally said fuck it i'll just use eth3 and eth4 instead of eth1 and now it works. it wouldn't let me bridge eth1 for whatever reason but at least it's working so thanx!!!

  • @matthewfranck9930
    @matthewfranck9930 Před 3 lety +1

    Awesome example! Noticed @ min 12 you switched third Mikrotik's subnets ;)

    • @TheNetworkBerg
      @TheNetworkBerg  Před 3 lety

      Haha whoops! Good catch as well which is definitely something you do not want to do xD Luckily for me the /29's both fell into that /24 subnet so all hosts could still communicate.

  • @kevingreen2626
    @kevingreen2626 Před 3 lety

    Can you bridge the wan interface so that two or more ports are on the wan side of the router communicating with each other on layer 2 and the rest of the ports remain on the lan side of the router?
    I tried this recently but router os kept changing my programming changes to other settings and once I finally figured out how to force the changes to stick I lost inet connectivity and management from WAN side.
    Any ideas where I may have went wrong?
    WAN port 1 10.10.40.1/24
    WAN port 2 10.10.40.2/24
    LAN bridge 192.168.100.1/24

    • @TheNetworkBerg
      @TheNetworkBerg  Před 3 lety +1

      You can bridge your two WAN ports, though I need to understand what your requirement is with this. Are you trying to build redundancy in case an interface/link goes down? STP will likely put one of the ports in a non forwarding state anyways. For this to work you would also need both interfaces to connect to either a switch or another device with both interfaces also bridged to yours. Also make sure that you put your IP address on the actual Bridge interface and not on the Port itself. So you wouldn't really need to assign two different IP addresses if you are trying to just bridge the WAN interfaces.
      You could create a diagram on draw.io for me so that I can better understand what you are trying to achieve and how your WAN is connecting to your Mikrotik.

  • @ezylearningseries3764
    @ezylearningseries3764 Před 2 lety

    Hi! Would just like to ask, what apps do you use to make the netework diagram. Thanks,

    • @TheNetworkBerg
      @TheNetworkBerg  Před 2 lety +2

      Sure, I make use of a free tool on draw.io
      You access this directly from the web and it saves your diagrams to many repos like Googledrive,Git or even on your local machine
      Very handy and is just as useful if not more than visio.

    • @ezylearningseries3764
      @ezylearningseries3764 Před rokem

      Thank you so much 🥰 God bless you and your channel 💕

  • @allenforquer66
    @allenforquer66 Před rokem

    Would this work to have two separate subnets on my network? Or possibly even have to WAN connections with one router?

    • @allenforquer66
      @allenforquer66 Před rokem

      This worked perfectly for having 2 separate subnets on my network. Thank you for the great videos.

  • @marconoyola1166
    @marconoyola1166 Před rokem

    What software are you using to draw out the network?

  • @pouyaazimi2310
    @pouyaazimi2310 Před 3 lety +1

    How can I force my MikroTik router to use vpn for internet access?

    • @ashikdas3843
      @ashikdas3843 Před 3 lety +1

      czcams.com/video/Ez1U-r7oPsw/video.html

  • @ilar10N
    @ilar10N Před 3 lety

    add video about VLAN Filtering

  • @Tenly2009
    @Tenly2009 Před 2 lety

    I thought I was following along well, but you lost me at the end. When you created the bridge on the first 2 routers, you assigned an IP Address with a /29 mask but when you got to Router3, you used a /24 and didn’t explain why??? Did I miss something obvious?

    • @TheNetworkBerg
      @TheNetworkBerg  Před 2 lety

      You didn't miss anything Tenly, that was a continuity error on my part, router3 was also supposed to be a /29 mask, however out of habit I made it a /24. The reason this still worked fine is because the /29 the other devices are in are still within the same broadcast domain of the /24 of router3. If anything you can just scratch the /24 and replace it as a /29, apologies for confusing you at the end.

    • @Tenly2009
      @Tenly2009 Před 2 lety

      @@TheNetworkBerg That clears things up quite a bit…. Thanks for the explanation!
      One other quick question if you don’t mind…. At the beginning of the video, you say that “each port on a router is by default it’s own broadcast domain” - but I’ve just picked up an RB5009 with RouterOS 7.1 and there is a Switch section which contains 1 item named Switch1 and it appears to have all 9 ports assigned to it…? Do you have a video that contains an explanation of what this is and why I should or should not be worried about it? I was hoping to created 3 separate subnets on this device with Eth1-3 bridged as the 1st, eth5-6 as the second and eth7-8 as the 3rd - but I don’t see any way to remove them from Switch1! Will that be a problem for what I’m trying to do?