This is expected behavior. When you have two subnets that are part of different address scopes, that's a way of saying they are part of different routing domains and there may be overlapping IPs between them etc.
A neutron router won't route between internal subnets that are members of different address scopes. You can observe this same behavior with ipv4 address scopes as well.
This is expected behavior. When you have two subnets that are part of different address scopes, that's a way of saying they are part of different routing domains and there may be overlapping IPs between them etc.
A neutron router won't route between internal subnets that are members of different address scopes. You can observe this same behavior with ipv4 address scopes as well.