I will mark the other L2 and 元 LAN ports as access port under single VLAN tag ID. The general idea here is simple, I will connect my laptop to my WiFi router through LAN port L1. If your home WiFi router has more than one port, it most likely supports VLAN capability and can be used as a managed switch WiFi routers typically have one WAN/”internet” port and 4 LAN ports – is there a way I could utilize my cheap WiFi Router as managed switch ? Turns out I can! ![]() ![]() Now I did not have a managed switch lying around, but I had a WiFi router. One popular, and obvious, solution for single NIC pfSense box design involves using an external switch to “expand” number of available ethernet ports. One may argue that I could use laptop’s wireless card for WiFi access – but anyone who has tried running hostapd on FreeBSD knows that you could barely go beyond a few Mbps of speed. That meant that I could only connect my “internet”/WAN cable coming from my ISP, I had no second port to connect my WiFi router for wireless access. ![]() I had an old laptop that I could use to install pfSense on, but as is case with any laptop – the laptop only had single network interface. I really wanted to try out pfSense while I had lots of ARM based single-board computers such as Raspberry Pi, Rock Pi E lying around – I did not have a spare x86 machine to host pfSense on – as pfSense does not support ARM CPU (yet).
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