Sorry for being such a noob. My networking is not very strong, thought I’d ask the fine folks here.

Let’s say I have a Linux box working as a router and a dumb switch (I.e. L2 only). I have 2 PCs that I would like to keep separated and not let them talk to each other.

Can I plug these two PCs into the switch, configure their interfaces with IPs from different subnets, and configure the relevant sub-interfaces and ACLs (to prevent inter-subnet communication through the router) on the Linux router?

What I’m asking is; do I really need VLANs? I do need to segregate networks but I do not trust the operating systems running on these switches which can do L3 routing.

If you have a better solution than what I described which can scale with the number of computers, please let me know. Unfortunately, networking below L3 is still fuzzy in my head.

Thanks!

  • marauding_gibberish142@lemmy.dbzer0.comOP
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    1 day ago

    The computers will be running OpenBSD. I am researching hardening methods for them and also seeing if it is feasible for me to get Corebooted hardware. I didn’t mention it because I didn’t think it was important.

    I feel like my post is being taken very negatively with people finding faults in my words rather than in the networking concept. Would you happen to know why?

      • marauding_gibberish142@lemmy.dbzer0.comOP
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        1 day ago

        asking for people to solve a solved problem

        Solved using devices that run proprietary software (which is, I imagine, frowned upon in such communities) which we don’t control at all. Heck, even Mikrotik who has a good rapport with this community uses a proprietary Linux distro with a severely outdated kernel for their devices. For something as critical as internal networking, I’m surprised I do not see more dialogue on improving the situation.

        Let me try and explain the problem. I want to build a setup where I have multiple clustered routers (I’m sure you’ve heard of the clustering features in PFSENSE/OPNSENSE/DIY approach using Keepalived). But if I want to use VLANs without using a switch running god-knows-what under the hood, I’m going to need a LOT OF ports. Unfortunately, 6+ port PCIe cards are quite expensive and sometimes have many other problems.

        This is why I’m trying to find simpler solution. The solution that you mention doesn’t seem to be a solution at all, but just the community giving up on trying to find one and accepting what is given. I was hoping for a better outcome.

        • bane_killgrind@slrpnk.net
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          1 day ago

          Not liking the solution you have doesn’t mean you don’t have a solution.

          Anyway, watch the playlist I sent, it’s a great overview of the OSI model with some other stuff. You mentioned not understanding some layers, once you do you will understand the limitations of the hardware you have.