Difficult to find the good answer, because the VRF need a default T0 gateway to work, so it's again a vicious question from vmware.
I found these in the ICM 4.0 and i think it's confirm the good BC answer :
A segment is configured as a trunk when more than one VLAN is configured. A range of VLANs can also be specified (VLAN X-Y).
Uplink trunk segments specify which VLANs are allowed but do not add 802.1Q VLAN tagging. Tags are added in the uplink interface of VRF gateways.
You can configure a dedicated uplink trunk segment for each VRF uplink if the trunk is configured as a single VLAN range (X-X). As a best practice, you should connect the VRF uplinks to the same uplink trunk segment. This method reduces the number of resources required (segments, logical switch ports, and logical router ports).
you are wrong.
its B is required to set the allowed vlan for a segment, this is connected to the VRF gateway
https://docs.vmware.com/en/VMware-NSX-T-Data-Center/3.2/administration/GUID-4CB5796A-1CED-4F0E-ADE0-72BF7B3F762C.html
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