02-27-2014 08:51 AM - edited 03-07-2019 06:26 PM
Hi,
lan1 is 192.168.0.0/24 with a dhcp server on 192.168.0.8 (GW 192.168.0.1)..no vlan set
All of the stuff i am describing below is working without vlan (if i attach a switch on the pfsesne lan side and make test with access point connected to it)..
I have to use vlan to add another dhcp server (the pfsense server) on my network.
I wanna make another wireless lan access to internet but not to lan1..so the wan on pfsense belong to my default lan.
I ve got pfsense on a basic computer with 2 nics:
- 1 NIC for the the pfsense lan side (with dhcp (192.168.10.0/23 start at 192.168.10.11),firewall rules..squid and radius server)..connect to a port which is vlan 40 (let say) and wireless access point belong to vlan 40 as well and configured for radius access.
- 1 NIC (192.168.0.49/24)for the wan pfsense side (which is actually belonging to my lan..see above) belonging to the default vlan..should be vlan 1.
The question is : does 2 NICS on a same computer and not belonging to the same vlan are making automatically intervlan or not ?
in another word, does a wireless client let say 192.168.11.10 will have access to the GW which is on default vlan (192.168.0.1) (without speaking about firewall rules).
Hope it's clear enough.
Thanks for help,
02-27-2014 09:03 AM
The question is : does 2 NICS on a same computer and not belonging to the same vlan are making automatically intervlan or not ?
Depends on whether you have enabled IP routing between the NICs.
Edit - or disabled it ie. some OS version have it enabled by default and some don't.
Jon
02-27-2014 09:39 AM
There is a nat between them (pfsense act like a rooter)..as the pfsense lan client are able to ping the GW(192.168.0.1 on NW 192.168.0.0/24) and access to Internet.
I make this pfsense server server for this scope..build a wireless segment with AP(s) on the lan side of pfsense..then ..add some rule to make them just access to Internet through my primary lan GW.
May be i am not asking in the right forum...thought vlan's rules were the same for all kind of OS...as OS is an upper layer.
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