I am worried that there is not really a benefit of doing that, just more noise and energy consumption.
Why would you want to do this, anyway? Or, as I as a developer regularly have to ask our sales people: what do you actually want to achieve that led you to this question?
Here’s my use-case, I’m pretty sure the first 2 are pretty common (common enough to be supported by most OEM firmware):
- main LAN
- guest LAN (isolated from “main” but can access internet)
- IoT LAN (isolated from internet, can be accessed from “main”; prevents devices from phoning home)
But you don’t need several LANs for this. This can easily done with proper routing. A can access internet and internal network addresses. B can only access internet, and C can only reach internal addresses.
I’m curious. How would you identify who’s guest and who’s not in this case?
With multiple networks it’s pretty easy as they are on a different network.
It’s more like: I know people do this, but I don’t, so I wanted to see what was the reasoning behind these things.