tyfeatherston wrote:In one of our locations we added another /27. The problem is the ISP attached both ranges to the same port.
That's not necessarily a problem if you were reluctant to give up your original IP asignement and they only provide a single port hand off. However, they should not have assigned one of the new IP addresses to their port. They should be passing the entire /27 to you.
As dpurgert stated though, a /26 would be better in the long run. The ISP should be willing to move you to a /26 and give you a window to migrate over to them. Whether a /26 or two /27s, it is still the same number of IPs and a /26 is more efficient for the customer as well as the ISP.