Interfaces
Overview of all interface types available in RouterOS for network connectivity and virtualization.
RouterOS supports a wide variety of interface types for different networking scenarios, from basic Ethernet connections to advanced virtualization and wireless technologies.
Physical interfaces
Ethernet interfaces
Standard Ethernet - Basic wired network connectivity
SFP/SFP+ - Fiber optic connections for high-speed links
Switch chip - Hardware-accelerated switching on supported devices
Wireless interfaces
WiFi - 802.11 wireless networking (a/b/g/n/ac/ax)
LTE - Cellular connectivity for internet access and backup
Virtual interfaces
Layer 2 virtualization
Bridge - Connect multiple interfaces at Layer 2
VLAN filtering and RSTP/MSTP support
Hardware offloading capabilities
IGMP snooping and multicast control
VLAN - 802.1Q VLAN tagging for network segmentation
Inter-VLAN routing and switching
VLAN trunk and access port configuration
QinQ double tagging support
VXLAN - Layer 2 overlay networks over Layer 3 infrastructure
24-bit VNI namespace for massive scale
Multicast and unicast replication modes
EVPN integration for advanced deployments
Layer 3 tunneling
PPPoE - Point-to-Point Protocol over Ethernet for ISP connections
GRE - Generic Routing Encapsulation tunnels
Point-to-point IP tunneling over IP networks
Routing protocol transport and site connectivity
EoIP - Ethernet over IP tunneling (MikroTik proprietary)
Layer-2 transparent bridging over IP
Remote site integration at Ethernet level
IPSec - Secure tunnels with encryption
VPN interfaces
OpenVPN - SSL/TLS-based VPN connections
WireGuard - Modern, fast VPN protocol
L2TP - Layer 2 Tunneling Protocol
SSTP - Secure Socket Tunneling Protocol
PPTP - Point-to-Point Tunneling Protocol (deprecated)
Advanced interfaces
Bonding and aggregation
Bonding - Link aggregation for increased bandwidth and redundancy
LACP - Link Aggregation Control Protocol for dynamic bonding
Specialized interfaces
Loopback - Virtual interfaces for router identification
ZeroTier - Software-defined networking
VPLS - Virtual Private LAN Service
MPLS - Multiprotocol Label Switching
Interface configuration principles
Common parameters
All interfaces share some common configuration options:
Interface naming conventions
Use descriptive names that indicate purpose
Include VLAN ID in VLAN interface names
Use consistent prefixes for similar interface types
Example:
ether1-wan,vlan10-mgmt,bridge1-lan
Interface selection guide
Choose the right interface type
For basic connectivity:
Ethernet - Wired LAN connections
WiFi - Wireless LAN connections
PPPoE - DSL/cable internet connections
For network segmentation:
VLAN - Segment traffic within same physical network
Bridge - Connect multiple network segments
VXLAN - Extend Layer 2 networks across Layer 3 boundaries
For remote connectivity:
VPN interfaces - Secure remote access
GRE/EoIP - Site-to-site tunnels
LTE - Cellular backup connections
For redundancy and performance:
Bonding - Combine multiple links
Bridge with STP - Loop prevention in redundant topologies
Best practices
Interface design
Plan addressing - Use consistent IP addressing schemes
Document everything - Comment all interfaces with their purpose
Use VLANs - Segment traffic appropriately
Consider redundancy - Plan for link failures
Monitor performance - Track utilization and errors
Security considerations
Disable unused interfaces - Reduce attack surface
Use proper VLANs - Isolate different network segments
Implement access control - Control who can access what
Monitor traffic - Watch for unusual patterns
Regular maintenance - Keep configurations up to date
Performance optimization
Choose appropriate MTU - Match network requirements
Enable hardware offloading - When available and beneficial
Monitor utilization - Identify bottlenecks
Use bonding - For increased bandwidth where needed
Optimize switch settings - For bridge configurations
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