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Wired star topology for mesh organisation

plzdontcry
Community Member

Hi there,

Is it possible to connect three of Google Nest Wifi Pro via their WAN ports to  single switch, connected to the internet to get mesh working? All i found is that wired mesh could be only organized via ring topology (where each of nests is connected to each other).
Its important for me to know cause i've got only one ethernet port in each of my rooms, connected to the central switch.

1 Recommended Answer

MichaelP
Diamond Product Expert
Diamond Product Expert

Hello @plzdontcry 

You can't connect all of the access points to the same outer network through a switch. But, you also don't have to connect them in a chain. One of the units (primary) is set up differently from the others in order to act as a firewall and router that creates a new "inner" network. That is the only one that should be connected directly to your internet service. The rest of the units (secondaries) normally connect to this inner network through an 802.11s wireless mesh. But, you can also connect those secondaries back to the primary via a switched Ethernet network. The key is to have your Ethernet switch connected to the LAN Ethernet port on the primary, so the switch is part of the "inner" network. Then, the secondaries can be connected to that switch (or other switches that are downstream from it). Things to watch out for are smart/managed switches that include "loop detection" or "Spanning Tree Protocol" (STP). Those will interfere with wiring secondaries, so either don't use those switches, or consult the switch manual(s) to disable those features first. Here's a support page with more details: https://support.google.com/googlenest/answer/7215624?hl=en 

View Recommended Answer in original post

5 REPLIES 5

MichaelP
Diamond Product Expert
Diamond Product Expert

Hello @plzdontcry 

You can't connect all of the access points to the same outer network through a switch. But, you also don't have to connect them in a chain. One of the units (primary) is set up differently from the others in order to act as a firewall and router that creates a new "inner" network. That is the only one that should be connected directly to your internet service. The rest of the units (secondaries) normally connect to this inner network through an 802.11s wireless mesh. But, you can also connect those secondaries back to the primary via a switched Ethernet network. The key is to have your Ethernet switch connected to the LAN Ethernet port on the primary, so the switch is part of the "inner" network. Then, the secondaries can be connected to that switch (or other switches that are downstream from it). Things to watch out for are smart/managed switches that include "loop detection" or "Spanning Tree Protocol" (STP). Those will interfere with wiring secondaries, so either don't use those switches, or consult the switch manual(s) to disable those features first. Here's a support page with more details: https://support.google.com/googlenest/answer/7215624?hl=en 

Thx a lot.

This makes sense and fits my cable setup. 😀

LovelyM
Community Specialist
Community Specialist

Hello everyone,

You've been a great help, @MichaelP.

@plzdontcry, thanks for posting. It seems like your issue was already addressed. I want to make sure that everything is covered on your end. Feel free to reply to this thread if you have additional questions or concerns.

Sincerely, 
Lovely

LovelyM
Community Specialist
Community Specialist

Hi plzdontcry,

I wanted to follow up and see if you are still in need of any help. Please let me know if you are still having trouble from here, as I would be happy to take a closer look and assist you further.

Cheers,
Lovely

LovelyM
Community Specialist
Community Specialist

Hey there,

It's me again. I'll be locking this thread in the next 24 hours. If you have new issues, updates or discussion topics, feel free to start a new thread here in the Community.

Regards, 
Lovely