Depends on the device.  Lots of radios have an OOB channel across the link.  
Cielo for example.  It's only like 256K but great for management if your 
running a real oob mgmt network.

Sent from my iPhone

> On Mar 5, 2018, at 7:31 PM, Steve Jones <thatoneguyst...@gmail.com> wrote:
> 
> I may be helmet here, but am I correct in assuming that OOB managment ports 
> should not participate in bridging traffic across wireless links of any kind?
> this 2+0 has OOB on the radios, I have the management ports run into a switch 
> on each side. Loop protection is kicking the ports on and off. The customer 
> traffic is flowing over the wireless via LACP bonding in the same switch, but 
> isolated via VLAN.
> 
> I should not, under any circumstances see MAC addresses from the other side 
> of a link via the management port should I? Im not only seeing the remote 
> switch, but every mac in the MAC table from the remote switch. both sides 
> have the OOB in ports 21 and 22, in the following, both switched have port 22 
> blocked due to detected loop, but it flip flops back and forth between 21 and 
> 22 when the detection timer expires. I havent had calls of any issues with 
> customer traffic (both are independent DHCP subnets)
> 
> A SIDE Switch MAC Address - 74:46:a0:e8:ed:00
> A SIDE MAC Table
> 38:ea:a7:bc:24:40             21           Learned
>  
> B SIDE Switch MAC Address - 38:ea:a7:bc:24:40
> B SIDE MAC Table
> 74:46:a0:e8:ed:00            21           Learned
> 

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