jeffsf
2
Your insight is spot on. This is a common, effectively unresolvable problem with consumer-grade switches in all-in-one routers. In contrast to an enterprise-grade switch, the phys are active on power-up, so they bleed until configured. Changing network topology to avoid the problematic leak is one of the few ways that this can be resolved. If you have a sophisticated, managed switch, you may be able to block the upstream DHCP from the GL-MT300N-V2 (running that “WAN” as static). This could be done at L2 by blocking the MAC of the DHCP server to the GL-MT300N-V2, or with L3 filtering.