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advanced-access [2023/09/11 18:33] – [LAN Access Notes] -formatting hogwild | advanced-access [2023/09/12 17:20] (current) – [LAN Access Notes] hogwild | ||
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For example, let's say we have two LANs, one primary (LAN0/br0) and one secondary (LAN1/br1). | For example, let's say we have two LANs, one primary (LAN0/br0) and one secondary (LAN1/br1). | ||
- | If we want devices on LAN0 to | + | If you want devices on LAN0 to be able to communicate with devices on LAN1 (and vice versa), |
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Regardless of LAN Access rules, by default a LANx device is able to reach (e.g. ping) all the router' | Regardless of LAN Access rules, by default a LANx device is able to reach (e.g. ping) all the router' | ||
- | LAN Access is an IP-level access control. This means that **all ports/ | + | All entries in LAN Access are one-way only. \\ |
+ | For example, if you want hosts on LAN0 to be able to communicate with hosts on LAN1, | ||
+ | and hosts on LAN1 to be able to communicate with hosts on LAN0, you will need to have two entries in the table to achieve that. | ||
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+ | LAN Access is an IP-level access control. | ||
+ | This means that **all ports/ | ||
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