Meraki Replacement Plan
-
@ubiquiti-user said in Meraki Replacement Plan:
Would you guys opt for an onsite controller or a hosted one on vultr for $6/month?
If you ONLY have one site, go on site. If you have more than one, probably go with Vultr.
-
@scottalanmiller said in Meraki Replacement Plan:
@ubiquiti-user said in Meraki Replacement Plan:
Would you guys opt for an onsite controller or a hosted one on vultr for $6/month?
If you ONLY have one site, go on site. If you have more than one, probably go with Vultr.
It is trivial to move later.
-
@scottalanmiller said in Meraki Replacement Plan:
@ubiquiti-user said in Meraki Replacement Plan:
Would you guys opt for an onsite controller or a hosted one on vultr for $6/month?
If you ONLY have one site, go on site. If you have more than one, probably go with Vultr.
One site in one building, but there are a few walls in the way. . .
-
The physical device would be the USG, correct?
-
@ubiquiti-user said in Meraki Replacement Plan:
The physical device would be the USG, correct?
No, you will not have the USG. That is a piece of shit, gimped ERL.
The UniFi Controller is a VM, running Debian 9.1 preferrably.
-
@jaredbusch said in Meraki Replacement Plan:
@ubiquiti-user said in Meraki Replacement Plan:
The physical device would be the USG, correct?
No, you will not have the USG. That is a piece of shit, gimped ERL.
The UniFi Controller is a VM, running Debian 9.1 preferrably.
OK, that was my question. Is there a physical Unifi Controller device, or should it be run as a VM (somewhere).
-
@ubiquiti-user said in Meraki Replacement Plan:
@jaredbusch said in Meraki Replacement Plan:
@ubiquiti-user said in Meraki Replacement Plan:
The physical device would be the USG, correct?
No, you will not have the USG. That is a piece of shit, gimped ERL.
The UniFi Controller is a VM, running Debian 9.1 preferrably.
OK, that was my question. Is there a physical Unifi Controller device, or should it be run as a VM (somewhere).
They sell a stick device, but you should never use it IMO.
-
If you don't have a place to run a VM locally then run it on Vultr.
-
@coliver said in Meraki Replacement Plan:
If you don't have a place to run a VM locally then run it on Vultr.
We do, but it's due for a revamp as well
-
@ubiquiti-user said in Meraki Replacement Plan:
@coliver said in Meraki Replacement Plan:
If you don't have a place to run a VM locally then run it on Vultr.
We do, but it's due for a revamp as well
That's fine, because the controller can be backed up and then the VM deleted. A new VM can then be built and the controller restored.
During the downtime, your AP's will continue to work just fine. You will only lose history.