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!

  • non_burglar@lemmy.world
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    9 hours ago

    https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/IEEE_802.1X

    802.1x are a set of protocols that allow port access to be locked to specific devices, which would preclude your need for multiple subnets. You would likely need a few extra physical ports on your white box router, the unmanaged switch could later become overwhelmed passing traffic in a more complicated setup, and you would still need to keep trusted and untrusted traffic separate at the gateway subnet.

    Your use case is exactly why vlans were invented.

    However, I suspect from your other answers that you are actually looking for an open source managed switch so your entire networking stack is auditable.

    There are a few solutions like opx, but hardware supporting opx is prohibitively expensive and it is almost always cheaper to build a beige box and use Linux or get a 2nd hand supported device and use openwrt.

    • marauding_gibberish142@lemmy.dbzer0.comOP
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      9 hours ago

      Ah, is that something like sticky ports?

      Indeed, I would like to run a switch with a FOSS OS, and I don’t see any viable way of doing that. Unfortunate, but whitebox router + switch it is then

      • non_burglar@lemmy.world
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        8 hours ago

        The effect is similar to sticky ports, but sticky ports is just filtering based on Mac address, which can be spoofed.

        802.11x allows traffic from a device only if they also have the correct EAP certificate.