On Fri, Jan 25, 2019 at 7:59 AM Peter N. M. Hansteen <[email protected]>
wrote:

> On 1/24/19 11:55 PM, John Page wrote:
>

> I decided on installing OpenBSD 6.4 on a PC Engines apu4. I
> > had previously been using an Asus RT-86U as both my router and wireless
> > access point.
>
> OpenBSD's newer-wifi protocol support unfortunately lags what is
> available in various commercial products.
>
> For that reason, in similar environments to what you describe I've tried
> to get hold of APs with good radios and support for all the protocol
> variants, then disabled all functionality on the access points
> themselves other than the access point functionality, in some cases down
> to even letting the things get the IP address for their Ethernet
> interface from the OpenBSD dhcpd.
>
> With 'dumb' access points little more than Ethernet interfaces
> themselves, you get to control how things work from the sane OpenBSD
> environment.
>

I second this approach as working quite well, and is almost as easy to
manage as HostAP from within OpenBSD.  I have my commercial AP configured
to bridge each SSID/network onto a different VLAN.  My OpenBSD router can
then process each VLAN in a way appropriate to their purpose (family,
guests, streaming appliances, etc).

--david

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