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How to set up a subnet?
Guys, help with this question, I can not understand how to solve the problem.
I have a network: Router Asus WL500GP to it from the provider cable via DHCP.
The cable goes from the router to a regular switch, from the last cable they diverge through the PC and one goes to the Netis E1 "access point", which in turn distributes WIFI. Everything is super, great, but I can’t get to the device that are connected to netis, different subnets: asus has 192.168.1.1 by wire, and wifi has 192.168.0.1. In turn, from devices 0.1 (netis) I can get to 1.1, but not vice versa. Somehow strange, the firmware on the router is Tomato. After playing around with the settings, nothing happened.
What can be done?
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I'm sorry, do you have Netis in router mode? Those. there raised NAT and subnet 0.1 behind nat?
Well, nothing will work.
Disable the DHCP server and NAT on it, switch the Wi-Fi clients to the same 1.1 and the problem is solved. Those. to make from an access point "stupidly a switch for wireless".
Well, or disable NAT, on DHCP configure the mask 255.255.0.0 for clients 0.1 with a gateway to the same place as 1.1, and for the guys from 1.1 manually add the route to 0.* by 0.1 ... but the first option is easier :)
You can do port forwarding on Netis if you have a specific service on your phone.
For example, you only need port 80 (the web face of some application on your phone). Give the phone a static ip, for example 192.168.0.200, and set up port forwarding from, for example, 8080 to 192.168.0.200:80. Further in the main network, Netis ip is 192.168.1.50, for example, then knock on 192.168.1.50:8080 - and you get to 192.168.0.200:80. Something like this.
I also thought to do this, only it's not a router (netis) but a whistle distributing Wi-Fi, there are no real settings
Try disabling DHCP on Netis so that Asus always issues addresses.
Unless, of course, this is an access point, and not a router.
Your problem is that the devices do not know where these subnets are, because routes are not registered.
Approximately it will be like this:
- On Asus, you specify that the network 192.168.0.1/24 is located behind the access point (write the ip address of the point that Asus gives it);
- On Netis, you specify that the network 192.168.1.1/24 is located behind the router (local ip address of Asus).
If there are no routing settings on Netis, then either google distribution of routes via DHCP (I don’t know if it’s possible on Asus) or think about buying a more functional access point.
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