Gönderim Listesi os2-wireless_users@2rosenthals.com Ar?vli ?leti #2799

Gönderen: Sam Lewis <os2-wireless_users@2rosenthals.com> Tam Ba?l?klar
Çözülmemi? ?leti
Gönderen: os2-wireless_users-owner <os2-wireless_users-owner@2rosenthals.com>
Konu: [OS2Wireless] Setting up wireless router
Tarih: Wed, 01 Jun 2005 11:10:42 -0500
Alacak: os2-wireless_users@2rosenthals.com

John Poltorak wrote:

On Wed, Jun 01, 2005 at 03:17:22PM +0100, Howard Winter wrote:
 

John,

On Tue, 31 May 2005 16:58:17 +0100, John Poltorak wrote:

   

I need some help setting up my wireless router - I've      
had it for years but    
only ever use it as router between my ADSL line and my      
ethernet    
network.

The WLAN Configuration allows it to be set in either      
Bridged or Routed    
mode. It's currently set to Bridged, and the Ethernet      
interface has a    
fixed IP address which I want to keep.

Can I use the same IP address on both the WLAN and      
Ethernet interface? I'm    
really not very clear about how this should hang      
together.

As I understand it (and I stand to be corrected!) Bridging is a connection between two parts *of the same network*, so not only can you use the same IP address on either side, but you must!  It acts as a single "point" on the network, with different physical interfaces, but there's no way for it to have two addresses.

Routing, on the other hand, connects two seperate networks, so has a different address on each side.
   


I'm still no wiser....

I have a device with three interfaces  ADSL, Ethernet and WLAN. If I set up WLAN in bridge mode, does that mean anything on the WLAN network is on the same network as the Ethernet network?

I think I would prefer adsl/ethernet to be bridged and adsl/wlan to be routed, but have no idea if that is feasable or not.



 

Cheers,


Howard Winter
The H2Org
http://www.ecomstation.co.uk
   



 

Well here's my $.02 worth.  I don't use a Wireless router, instead I use a PC with two NIC's as my router.  But the principles are the same.  You want to use the router mode.  You want your ADSL part of the router to be a DHCP client and your ISP will assign an IP address to it, unless your ISP has given you a Static IP address, in that case you keep that IP address which is visible on the Internet.  Then you can assign a Static IP address to your local Lan side of your network, popular Local IP ranges are 192.168.x.x or 10.0.x.x.  Then you can turn on the DHCP Server in your router and setup your workstations as DHCP clients and your done.  Your Gateway and maybe your DNS will be the routers static IP address you assigned to the Local Lan side.
Hope this pertains to your case,
Sam
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