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It is a complete shit device, I had to buy smart switches to automatically reboot them every night one by one so they don't randomly drop from the 'mesh' the next day. And they were expensive and I have 5 nodes which is why I am hoping to keep using the damn things. I hate them though.
As I understand it, the effect that you are suggesting is to move the Google Wifi IP Ranges to be the same as the wired, all 192.168.1.0.
I will think on that. Thanks
Well yes. Normally you would put opnsense on 192.168.1.1/24 and then the wifi device on say 192.168.1.10/24. Then you allow opnsense to do the DHCP and disable DHCP on the wifi (they like to offer these services which can be nice for really simple setups).
What you are realistically running into is a DHCP war, and google will probably win over opnsense for wifi devices.
If what you actually want is to separate the devices to different subnets, then you really need to create a LAN / WAN and WIFI interfaces. And plug the wifi devices in the the WIFI interface (another network port on your opnsense box).
Then doing this, you can create a firewall rule(s) that allows data LAN <-> WIFI etc however you please. (or not even, maybe only WIFI <-> WAN and not let wifi devices access your LAN net).
Alternatively if you have a smart enough switch you could isolate with VLANs. But for a simple network, this isnt really necessary.
Thank you!! Yes, it is a DHCP war. I just realized that I can talk to my hardwired devices but only by IP! Even though I specify my DNS server in google, its ignoring it for the browser. I wonder if that is DNS over HTTPS (DOH) in Chrome.
This is a different problem. But when you configure a competent DHCP server, you tell it to give out a bunch of information to the client, not just an IP address. It should tell it IP, subnet, gateway, DNS server IP and default domain name. (in opnsense most of this is default so you dont have to actually configure it - hit the (i) button and it will tell you. Example for domain name: "The default is to use the domain name of this system as the default domain name provided by DHCP. You may specify an alternate domain name here.")
Then on top of that google devices are notorious for ignoring DNS (ahem chromecast, etc) and want to use 8.8.8.8. This is because google does all sorts of non-DNS buggery on those devices, for example checking and pushing updates). Chrome on you PC could well be doing this as well, but it shouldnt it should be honouring your NICs config. However I don't for a second doubt that Chrome is preferring DoH to somewhere like 8.8.8.8 first.
You will need to create a rule to enforce your local DNS server and block all other outgoing attempts.
To do this create a NAT rule port forward -> set the interface to LAN ,set the destination to LAN net and INVERT. Then destination port to DNS. Finally redirect target to your DNS server (127.0.0.1 for your opnsense) and DNS port (53).
This NAT rule says any DNS NOT headed to the LAN network must be redirected to the DNS server in your LAN.