Ooma Core on the Stanford Campus
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- Posts:7
- Joined:Tue May 11, 2010 9:57 am
Any idea on how to get the Ooma to operate on a college campus? It cannot have DHCP or NAT because that will mess up the entire campus network because it cannot give out IP Addresses by itself, it needs to act as a bridge. I have come to the assumption that as long as I don't use the Home port I will be fine. To connect to the Stanford Network, they require the MAC/ethernet address of the device. I have given them both the address on the back of the device and the address that I get when I connect through the Home port. This so far has not worked. The ooma currently goes through the light cycle...
Thanks!
Thanks!
Re: Ooma Core on the Stanford Campus
You need to give them the MAC address of the modem port which is 1 higher than the MAC address listed on the label.michaellindahl wrote:Any idea on how to get the Ooma to operate on a college campus? It cannot have DHCP or NAT because that will mess up the entire campus network because it cannot give out IP Addresses by itself, it needs to act as a bridge. I have come to the assumption that as long as I don't use the Home port I will be fine. To connect to the Stanford Network, they require the MAC/ethernet address of the device. I have given them both the address on the back of the device and the address that I get when I connect through the Home port. This so far has not worked. The ooma currently goes through the light cycle...
Thanks!
You also need to connect a computer to the Home port and then connect to
http://setup.ooma.com
which is the setup page inside of the Ooma box.
Go to the Network page and configure it to always use the built-in MAC address.
Customer since January 2009
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Re: Ooma Core on the Stanford Campus
Keep in mind that the Ooma device require outbound ports to be opened
DNS (53), GPRS (3386), HTTPS (443), Net Data Mgmt (10000-20000), NTP (123), OpenVPN (1194), Sec. Virtual WrkSpace (3480) and Syslog (514).
If their FW is as strict as mind, then you have to setup a FW rules to allow for outbound.
Good luck
DNS (53), GPRS (3386), HTTPS (443), Net Data Mgmt (10000-20000), NTP (123), OpenVPN (1194), Sec. Virtual WrkSpace (3480) and Syslog (514).
If their FW is as strict as mind, then you have to setup a FW rules to allow for outbound.
Good luck
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- Posts:7
- Joined:Tue May 11, 2010 9:57 am
Re: Ooma Core on the Stanford Campus
...de is listed on the back I also gave them ...dfmurphy wrote:You need to give them the MAC address of the modem port which is 1 higher than the MAC address listed on the label.michaellindahl wrote:Any idea on how to get the Ooma to operate on a college campus? It cannot have DHCP or NAT because that will mess up the entire campus network because it cannot give out IP Addresses by itself, it needs to act as a bridge. I have come to the assumption that as long as I don't use the Home port I will be fine. To connect to the Stanford Network, they require the MAC/ethernet address of the device. I have given them both the address on the back of the device and the address that I get when I connect through the Home port. This so far has not worked. The ooma currently goes through the light cycle...
Thanks!
You also need to connect a computer to the Home port and then connect to
http://setup.ooma.com
which is the setup page inside of the Ooma box.
Go to the Network page and configure it to always use the built-in MAC address.
Is that good?
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- Posts:7
- Joined:Tue May 11, 2010 9:57 am
Re: Ooma Core on the Stanford Campus
I have it set as Open - Allows all incoming traffic, providing no protection. If you are running a service not listed above which requires connections initiated from the outside, choose this setting. This increases your exposure, but if your computer is fully patched, running a software firewall, and has good passwords, you should be safe.dknyinva wrote:Keep in mind that the Ooma device require outbound ports to be opened
DNS (53), GPRS (3386), HTTPS (443), Net Data Mgmt (10000-20000), NTP (123), OpenVPN (1194), Sec. Virtual WrkSpace (3480) and Syslog (514).
If their FW is as strict as mind, then you have to setup a FW rules to allow for outbound.
Good luck
Re: Ooma Core on the Stanford Campus
Ah, I used to be a RCC a some years ago. The MODEM port is set to use DHCP by default. Is the Hub getting an IP address off the MODEM port from the Stanford network? You can check this by going to the setup.ooma.com page and clicking on "Status". Next to "MODEM:", you should see something like "Connected : [<ip address>]"
If it's not, you'll need to contact your RCC or rescomp to re-check that the correct mac address appears in the NetDB.
If it's not, you'll need to contact your RCC or rescomp to re-check that the correct mac address appears in the NetDB.
Bobby B
Re: Ooma Core on the Stanford Campus
By any chance, OP make the OOMA works on the Stanford Campus?
I already purchased my second OOMA hub for my son, he will be attending Stanford this fall, I am hoping to get lucky without going thru lots of troubleshooting work.
If there is any tip to make it work, please post it here. Otherwise, I'll be busy troubleshooting OOMA and network coming this fall.
thanks
bob
I already purchased my second OOMA hub for my son, he will be attending Stanford this fall, I am hoping to get lucky without going thru lots of troubleshooting work.
If there is any tip to make it work, please post it here. Otherwise, I'll be busy troubleshooting OOMA and network coming this fall.
thanks
bob
- randybonnette
- Posts:3
- Joined:Mon Jun 24, 2019 2:48 am
Re: Ooma Core on the Stanford Campus
Hi Bob, my son is returning to Stanford after a gap year, so is it wise getting the Ooma system right now? Could he take it back home for the holidays later? Thanks.twinkle wrote:
I already purchased my second OOMA hub for Stanford, he will be attending Stanford this fall ...
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