[OpenWrt Wiki] Guest Wi-Fi on a dumb wireless AP using LuCI
openwrt.org › docs › guide-userFeb 05, 2021 · Guest Wi-Fi provides internet access to your network members. It also provides firewall security rules to isolate your guest network from the rest. This recipe is based on the Guest Wi-Fi basics and Guest Wi-Fi extras, providing a more user-friendly approach through the LuCI web interface. The changes below assume an OpenWrt default configuration.
[OpenWrt Wiki] Guest Wi-Fi basics
openwrt.org › docs › guide-userSep 27, 2021 · Introduction Guest Wi-Fi provides an isolated wireless network which is independent from your main WLAN. Guest clients have internet connectivity and restricted LAN connectivity. Follow Guest Wi-Fi extras for additional tuning. Goals Create an open wireless network independent from the main WLAN.
[OpenWrt Wiki] VLAN
openwrt.org › docs › guide-userNov 05, 2021 · To use a VLAN you need at least 2 devices supporting VLAN features (as any route requires at least 2 points), which is usually advanced routers, any OpenWrt device, and any self-respecting PC or single-board computer (Windows, MacOS, Linux and BSDs support VLANs). OpenWrt supports IEEE 802.1Q and IEEE 802.1ad VLAN standards.
[OpenWrt Wiki] VLAN
https://openwrt.org/docs/guide-user/network/vlan/switch_configuration05.11.2021 · A very common default VLAN configuration on many off-the-shelf routers is the LAN↔WAN separation. OpenWrt default configuration on such devices does usually mirror the stock configuration. Most of such routers only contain a single network interface (eth0), leading to a 5-port VLAN-enabled switch that is virtually partitioned into a LAN and WAN network by …
[OpenWrt Wiki] Guest Wi-Fi
openwrt.org › docs › guide-userAug 02, 2021 · Guest Wi-Fi Guest Wi-Fi provides an isolated wireless network which is independent from your main WLAN . Guest clients have internet connectivity and restricted LAN connectivity. Guest Wi-Fi typically relies on multi-SSID. However some hardware or drivers might not support multi-SSID, e.g. Broadcom requires to use the proprietary driver .