Distributed security policies that are difficult to maintain
Increased load on access switches, making them more prone to failures
03 | So Where Should Gateways Be Configured?
This depends on your network scale + business requirements:
Small networks (≤50 devices): Access layer industrial routers serving as gateways
Medium networks (50-500 devices): Aggregation layer gateways
Large networks (500+ devices): Core layer gateways
04 | Are “Hybrid Deployments” Possible?
Yes. Many real-world projects use “mixed” approaches:
Most VLANIF interfaces placed at the core for centralized management
Certain specialized networks (like surveillance cameras, security systems) placed at aggregation or access layers for local isolation and forwarding
Wireless controllers and DHCP servers deployed in a distributed manner using virtual gateways (SVIs) + DHCP relay
The key consideration remains your business traffic patterns and network flow structure.
05 | Practical Deployment Recommendations
Core-layer gateways work well, but require reliable devices + clear routing + sufficient resources
When using aggregation-layer gateways, each aggregation switch should only manage its own VLANs, avoiding cross-region mixing
Access-layer gateways are recommended for small-scale/independent segments/branch node scenarios
If implementing gateway redundancy, remember to use VRRP or HVRRP for high availability
Final Thoughts
Gateway placement isn’t an arbitrary decision.
It involves ensuring the entire network architecture is rational, business traffic flows smoothly, devices can handle the load, and maintenance remains manageable.
In summary:
Small networks: Edge gateways Medium networks: Aggregation gateways Large networks: Core gateways
A good architecture prevents chaos, supports expansion, and facilitates troubleshooting.
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