WAN vs mvneta0.4090 - SG 1100
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In my firewall logs i am seeing events on both the WAN interface and mvneta0.4090
In this example is the firewall event for mvnet0.4090 originating from my internal network? Are you able to help me understand better the role of the 2 interfaces and what it means for traffic to be blocked on each one?
I have an SG-1100. For additional context on why I am curious about this, I am trying to get a chromecast to work that is in a separate VLAN than the devices i want to cast from. I have avahi running and firewall rules opened up between the 2 VLANs.
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@agreed5101 said in WAN vs mvneta0.4090 - SG 1100:
In my firewall logs i am seeing events on both the WAN interface and mvneta0.4090
In this example is the firewall event for mvnet0.4090 originating from my internal network? Are you able to help me understand better the role of the 2 interfaces and what it means for traffic to be blocked on each one?
I have an SG-1100. For additional context on why I am curious about this, I am trying to get a chromecast to work that is in a separate VLAN than the devices i want to cast from. I have avahi running and firewall rules opened up between the 2 VLANs.
What's connected to the WAN port, a Draytek modem ?
https://cetteup.com/31/how-to-stop-your-draytek-vigor-router-modem-from-broadcasting-its-dsl-status-on-port-4944/
https://www.draytek.com/support/knowledge-base/5365#linux
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@agreed5101 said in WAN vs mvneta0.4090 - SG 1100:
Are you able to help me understand better the role of the 2 interfaces and what it means for traffic to be blocked on each one?
For the role of each port you need to think of what it actually is.
You have a WAN connected to the internet, then there's a "LAN" port off of that, that is the uplink to the switch and is the virtual port connecting to the virtual switch.
Then you have the physical LAN and OPT ports which are ports on the switch.
So think of a router with a WAN and LAN, with the LAN connected to port 1 of a 3 port switch, Port 2 of that switch is the LAN port and port 3 is the OPT. That's all in the 1100. -
@nogbadthebad said in WAN vs mvneta0.4090 - SG 1100:
@agreed5101 said in WAN vs mvneta0.4090 - SG 1100:
In my firewall logs i am seeing events on both the WAN interface and mvneta0.4090
In this example is the firewall event for mvnet0.4090 originating from my internal network? Are you able to help me understand better the role of the 2 interfaces and what it means for traffic to be blocked on each one?
I have an SG-1100. For additional context on why I am curious about this, I am trying to get a chromecast to work that is in a separate VLAN than the devices i want to cast from. I have avahi running and firewall rules opened up between the 2 VLANs.
What's connected to the WAN port, a Draytek modem ?
https://cetteup.com/31/how-to-stop-your-draytek-vigor-router-modem-from-broadcasting-its-dsl-status-on-port-4944/
https://www.draytek.com/support/knowledge-base/5365#linux
Thank you, I do indeed have a draytek modem and disabling broadcasting has stopped those events
@jarhead said in WAN vs mvneta0.4090 - SG 1100:
@agreed5101 said in WAN vs mvneta0.4090 - SG 1100:
Are you able to help me understand better the role of the 2 interfaces and what it means for traffic to be blocked on each one?
For the role of each port you need to think of what it actually is.
You have a WAN connected to the internet, then there's a "LAN" port off of that, that is the uplink to the switch and is the virtual port connecting to the virtual switch.
Then you have the physical LAN and OPT ports which are ports on the switch.
So think of a router with a WAN and LAN, with the LAN connected to port 1 of a 3 port switch, Port 2 of that switch is the LAN port and port 3 is the OPT. That's all in the 1100.Thank you