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It has taken me hours to get the modem and router talking to each other!
I have got it working, but with a compromise.
The modem is connected to the ISP by PPPoA and has a class A local IP address.
The router is connected to the modem and has a static class A ip on the wan side, but a class C on the LAN side.
This works.
However, I have 8 static IP addresses which have their uses from time to time.
If i change the router LAN IP and the PC IP to a valid class A the PC refuses to see the WAN unless i connect the modem to a port on the router and not the 'internet' socket. Is there a problem doing this? Will it bypass the firewall and NAT?
My old Netgear DG814 used the same IP for LAN and WAN making this far simpler.
Any advice?
The Welsh support two teams when it comes to rugby. Wales of course, and anyone else playing England
The routers LAN address should be set to the first IP in your block and the WAN should be set to auto so it picks up the framing address, this will be outside your public block.
When you own your own business you only have to work half a day. You can do anything you want with the other twelve hours.
I have:
XXX.XXX.XXX.80 - Network address
XXX.XXX.XXX.81 - Server
XXX.XXX.XXX.82 - My PC
XXX.XXX.XXX.83 - Xbox
XXX.XXX.XXX.84 - for DHCP
XXX.XXX.XXX.85 - This is the router's IP
XXX.XXX.XXX.86 - Called Router IP but actually the IP of the modem
XXX.XXX.XXX.87 - Broadcast address
With my old Netgear DG814 modem/router i set the WAN and LAN ip to .86
As these are seperates, the modem is .86 and the router is .85 (WAN) but doesn't like me using a class A for LAN. I assume I can set .85 for WAN and LAN on the wrt54g?
The Welsh support two teams when it comes to rugby. Wales of course, and anyone else playing England
I must be having problems using the modem in the 'back' of the router. I can specify .85 for WAN and LAN but it is messing up port forwarding. I guess the modem should be pluged into the 'front' internet port.... but the i need to specify a class c LAN IP to get everything to work - aargh!
The Welsh support two teams when it comes to rugby. Wales of course, and anyone else playing England
.87 for a broadcast address? That's risky. The broadcast is a bitmap where all the relevant bits should be 1. It should kind of be the opposite of your subnet mask. I think technically you're okay with what you've shown here, but you sure are being unnecessarily narrow. You should be a little more lax there.
Also, what does "XXX.84 - for DHCP" mean?
Gigabyte P35-DS3L with a Q6600, 2GB Kingston HyperX (after *3* bad pairs of Crucial Ballistix 1066), Galaxy 8800GT 512MB, SB X-Fi, some drives, and a Dell 2005fpw. Running WinXP.
I changed the LAN IPs to 192.168.0.x but the router still wouldn't conenct to the modem unless the modem was plugged into one of the ports and not the 'internet' port.
The Welsh support two teams when it comes to rugby. Wales of course, and anyone else playing England
On the upside port forwarding seems to work, although I have forwarded port 80 without enabling https access on 8080 which means that I cant access the router! Is there a way to change the port forwarding settings without going throught http?
The Welsh support two teams when it comes to rugby. Wales of course, and anyone else playing England
After nearly a month of trying I'm about to give up.
I cant get the modem and router to talk to each other properly.
If anyone else has a WRT54G and an etherney modem i'd be interested in seeing how you've got it connected. Linksys tech support are trying to help but I can't seem to get my problem acrosss.
I have restored web acess but I've still got no access to email
The Welsh support two teams when it comes to rugby. Wales of course, and anyone else playing England
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