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POE+ SWITCH TP-Link TL-SG3210XHP-M2

An affordable multi-Gig PoE+ switch with a big power budget and management features to match

- DAVE MITCHELL

“The switch is able to identify traffic from IP phones and prioritise it by dynamicall­y creating voice VLANs”

SCORE

PRICE £263 exc VAT from broadbandb­uyer.com

W hen it’s time to move your office network onto Wi-Fi 6, you don’t want to be held back by a last-generation gigabit switch. To reap the full bandwidth of 802.11ax you need a multi-gigabit back-end. Thankfully, that doesn’t have to mean a jacked-up price: for a shockingly reasonable £263, TP-Link’s TL-SG3210XHP-M2 desktop/rack switch offers eight 2.5GbE ports and two high-speed 10GbE SFP+ fibre uplink ports.

That’s not all. Each of the switch’s eight copper ports presents 802.3af/at PoE+, with a generous total power budget of 240W. This means that the switch can deliver 30W on every multi-gig port at once, making it a great choice for anyone wanting to upgrade or install an office full of APs with a minimum of cabling.

The TL-SG3210XHP-M2 can be managed locally from a smartly designed web console. Standard L2 features are plentiful and include port, MAC and protocol-based VLANs, QoS traffic prioritisa­tion and static and LACP link aggregatio­n groups. There’s even a basic set of Layer 3 routing capabiliti­es, sometimes referred to as Layer 3 Lite or Advanced L2+ – although the switch lacks the dynamic routing capabiliti­es you will find on more expensive full

Layer 3 switches.

VoIP networks are particular­ly well served. The switch can identify traffic from IP phones using their organisati­onally unique identifier (OUI) and prioritise it by dynamicall­y creating voice VLANs. Switch monitoring and diagnostic­s features are a cut above the rest as well: as well as supporting all versions of SNMP, the switch can run an internal sFlow agent for sending packet sampling data to a collector device – a feature we very rarely see at this sort of price.

As for power management, you can assign a priority to each port, and if the total power drain reaches the threshold, devices with the lowest priorities will be switched off first.

It’s a simple, practical approach that we’ve seen on plenty of other switches – the only difference being that, in this case, the TL-SG3210XHPM­2’s big power budget means most offices won’t ever trigger it.

For larger organisati­ons the switch can also be cloud-managed. Here TP-Link takes a similar approach to Ubiquiti Networks, with each site requiring a cloud controller to manage all local devices. You can download software for Windows and Linux that will handle this for free, but for testing we used TP-Link’s Omada OC300 hardware controller, a little black box that is preconfigu­red for the role and costs around £120.

All controller­s assigned to your account appear in the cloud portal, and selecting one transports you to its management console. Adding the switch to our site was simple: as soon as we’d connected it to the office network, the controller detected it and presented it in the console as “pending”. We could then click to adopt it, after which the switch disabled its own web interface and took its settings from the controller.

Selecting the switch from the controller’s device page brings up a handy graphic showing which ports are active, with details of connection speed and power status. An overview below shows the power budget, with tabs provided for assigning profiles to each port, rebooting powered devices and viewing attached clients.

One slight oddity we noticed is that not all of the switch’s settings can be accessed from the cloud portal. But you can configure them in standalone mode, and then apply a cloud profile that tells the switch to keep its existing settings after adoption. Another option is to use the profile override feature to manually apply settings for functions such as port mirroring, PoE modes and rate limiting.

For monitoring on the move, TP-Link provides free mobile apps, and we tried using the iOS version on an iPad to check on our sites. We were happy to see plenty of status details, including full power consumptio­n informatio­n, and controls to reboot the switch or upgrade its firmware.

Don’t be fooled by the low price: TP-Link’s TL-SG3210XHP-M2 offers a remarkable range of features. With ten multi-gig sockets, eight of them offering full PoE+ services, and a generous total power budget, it’s a terrifical­ly versatile switch, and is particular­ly well suited to SMBs looking to deploy high-performanc­e Wi-Fi 6 services.

REQUIREMEN­TS

1U rack/desktop chassis 8 x 2.5GbE ports with PoE+ 2 x 10GbE SFP+ ports 240W power budget 802.3af/at PoE/PoE+ 80Gbits/sec backplane capacity 16K MAC addresses internal PSU 440 x 180 x 44mm (WDH) web browser management, Omada controller software for Windows/Linux (free download) limited lifetime warranty

OPTIONS OC300 controller appliance,

£120 exc VAT

 ??  ?? BELOW The switch can be managed locally or via TP-Link’s free cloud platform
BELOW The switch can be managed locally or via TP-Link’s free cloud platform
 ??  ?? ABOVE Eight multiGig network ports share a big 240W PoE+ budget
ABOVE Eight multiGig network ports share a big 240W PoE+ budget

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