From ecc
Reviews homelab VLAN segmentation, local DNS filtering, and WireGuard-style remote access before changing router, firewall, DHCP, or VPN configuration.
How this skill is triggered — by the user, by Claude, or both
Slash command
/ecc:homelab-network-readinessThe summary Claude sees in its skill listing — used to decide when to auto-load this skill
Use this skill before changing a home or small-lab network that mixes VLANs,
Use this skill before changing a home or small-lab network that mixes VLANs, Pi-hole or another local DNS resolver, firewall rules, and remote VPN access.
This is a planning and review skill. Do not turn it into copy-paste router, firewall, or VPN configuration unless the target platform, current topology, rollback path, console access, and maintenance window are all known.
Collect this before giving implementation steps:
| Area | Questions |
|---|---|
| Internet edge | What is the modem or ONT? Is the ISP router bridged or still routing? |
| Gateway | What routes, firewalls, handles DHCP, and terminates VPNs? |
| Switching | Which switch ports are uplinks, access ports, trunks, or unmanaged? |
| Wi-Fi | Which SSIDs map to which networks, and are APs wired or mesh? |
| Addressing | What subnets exist today, and which ranges conflict with VPN sites? |
| DNS/DHCP | Which service currently hands out leases and resolver addresses? |
| Management | How will the operator reach the gateway, switch, and AP after changes? |
| Recovery | What can be reverted locally if DNS, DHCP, VLANs, or VPN routes break? |
Start with intent rather than vendor syntax.
| Zone | Typical contents | Default policy |
|---|---|---|
| Trusted | Laptops, phones, admin workstations | Can reach shared services and management only when needed |
| Servers | NAS, Home Assistant, lab hosts, DNS resolver | Accepts narrow inbound flows from trusted clients |
| IoT | TVs, smart plugs, cameras, speakers | Internet access plus explicit exceptions only |
| Guest | Visitor devices | Internet-only, no LAN reachability |
| Management | Gateway, switches, APs, controllers | Reachable only from trusted admin devices |
| VPN | Remote clients | Same or narrower access than trusted clients |
Before recommending VLAN IDs or subnets, confirm:
Pi-hole or another local resolver should be introduced as a dependency, not as a single point of failure.
home.arpa names.Useful validation evidence:
Client gets expected DHCP lease
Client receives expected DNS resolver
Public DNS lookup succeeds
Local home.arpa lookup succeeds
Blocked test domain is blocked only where intended
Gateway and DNS admin interfaces are not reachable from guest or IoT networks
For WireGuard-style access, decide what the VPN is allowed to reach before generating keys or opening ports.
| Mode | Use when | Risk notes |
|---|---|---|
| Split tunnel to one subnet | Remote admin for NAS or lab hosts | Keep route list narrow |
| Split tunnel to trusted services | Access selected apps by IP or DNS | Requires precise firewall rules |
| Full tunnel | Untrusted networks or travel | More bandwidth and DNS responsibility |
| Overlay VPN | Simpler remote access with identity controls | Still needs ACL review |
Do not recommend port forwarding until the operator confirms:
Prefer small, reversible changes:
homelab-network-setupnetwork-config-validationnetwork-interface-healthnpx claudepluginhub affaan-m/ecc --plugin eccChecklist for VLAN segmentation, local DNS filtering, and WireGuard remote access in homelab networks. Use before changing router, firewall, DHCP, or VPN config.
Designs home or homelab networks covering gateways, switches, APs, IP ranges, DHCP reservations, DNS, cabling, and common mistakes.
Network infrastructure for self-hosted environments: VLANs, firewalls (nftables, OPNsense, pfSense), DNS (Pi-hole, AdGuard Home, split-horizon), reverse proxies (Caddy, Traefik, Nginx Proxy Manager), VPN (WireGuard, Tailscale), TLS/SSL certificate management, DHCP, and security hardening. Invoke when task involves any interaction with network configuration — designing, implementing, debugging, reviewing, or planning network architecture.