The majority of my homelab consists of two servers: A Proxmox hypervisor and a TrueNAS file server. The bulk of my LAN traffic is between these two servers. At the moment, both servers are on my “main” VLAN. I have separate VLANs for guests and IoT devices, but everything else lives on VLAN2.

I have been considering the idea of creating another VLAN for storage, but I’m debating if there is any benefit to this. My NAS still needs to be accessible to non-VLAN-aware devices (my desktop PC, for instance), so from a security standpoint, there’s not much benefit; it wouldn’t be isolated. Both servers have a 10Gb DAC back to the switch, so bandwidth isn’t really a factor; even if it was, my switch is still only going to switch packets between the two servers; it’s not like it’s flooding the rest of my network.

Having a VLAN for storage seems like it’s the “best practice,” but since both servers still need to be accessible outside the VLAN, the only benefit I can see is limiting broadcast traffic, and as far as I know (correct me if I’m wrong), SMB/NFS/iSCSI are all unicast.

  • AlternateRoute@lemmy.ca
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    4 months ago
    • If having dedicated interfaces / subnets is needed for improved bandwidth
    • If you want to have a network segment with jumbo frames (you often don’t want this on the general network interfaces)
    • If the network protocol creates substantial network noise iSCSI / block level protocols tend to be very noisy. Vs file level ones like SMB or NFS