this post was submitted on 21 May 2024
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To lay some foundation, a VLAN is akin to a separate network with separate Ethernet cables. That provides isolation between machines on different VLANs, but it also means each VLAN must be provisioned with routing, so as to reach destinations outside the VLAN.
Routers like OpenWRT often treat VLANs as if they were distinct NICs, so you can specify routing rules such that traffic to/from a VLAN can only be routed to WAN and nowhere else.
At a minimum, for an isolated VLAN that requires internet access, you would have to
As a reminder, NAT and NAT66 are not firewalls.
People that down voted you don't know how to network engineer...