What managed switch are you using, and why? Are there open source alternatives, or even open hardware switches?
I’m quite partial to to-link and ubiquti
Me too, I like ubiquiti gear
I’ve got pfsense coming into the house, and then ubiquiti throughout.
I’m currently running pfsense, and then mikrotik and ubiquiti switched and ubiquiti AP’s. I’m slowly removing the ubiquiti switches and moving to mikrotik as I’m upgrading to 10gbe. Mikrotik switches have a reputation of being reliable, capable, and cheap-ish. So far I like them. While I love ubiquiti’s single pane of glass approach with the unifi controller, I wanted to get away from that a bit. I work in IT, and most things I encounter don’t have that… And are configured via cli and or web interface. When I built my home network I jumped into ubiquiti for the ease. Now I’m back tracking for more learning.
Anything running open wrt. I have 4 different devices with ooenwrt on them and they justseamlessly works greatt .
I used to be a big netgear fan. But they had a lot of connections with the nsa. So now I use tplink for everything since they’re a great cheaper brand. But they’re chinese, so I traded one invasive country for another
I might cop some flack but I use Cisco, they’re rock solid, last for years and just work with minimal issues and I’ve not run into problems with hardware under performing or firmware bugs like I have on others.
That said, Ubiquiti makes fantastic hardware, I believe Mikrotik does too.
You can absolutely buy open hardware that allows you to install custom switching OS; Dell and Mellanox make them as do many other manufacturers (I think even Facebook has a hardware switch, not that I’d buy it lol). One of the more common OS to install on them is Cumulus Linux and a lot of these use “spine leaf” topologies.
Thank you for the insight. Other comments mention Mikrotik a lot, but as I understand they don’t offer open hardware … I will research some more in the direction of open hardware, thank you!