@BrechtSchamp wrote:
however clients on the NAT SSID may be unable to communicate with these networks."
Thanks for the link @BrechtSchamp
That statement on the document seem's a little vague to me though, no?
So maybe I'm misunderstanding something fundamental here. The AP is NAT'ing, so I'm not seeing how the client behind it getting (lets just pretend 10.1.1.1) will ever be able to have an issue with a LAN side client or device that might also have 10.1.1.1 (coincidentally). I always viewed this as like RFC1918 over the Internet. Issues don't happen, because its being NAT'ed via the public IP.
In this case the 'public IP' being the IP of the AP. The client won't even know what that IP is since he'll only ever know about 10.128.128.128
The only thing I can think of is if the client gets 10.128.128.128 (either unlikely or not possible via Meraki doing something behind the scenes), or two clients get the same IP, but would that matter either since NAT/and isolation?
I hate it when I start to overthink stuff like this lol