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Small business network help quick! ITS EASY!!I need a config like this: modem -- (firewall eventually) -- server -- router -- clients Right now I am going to configure this using winxp but will upgrade to Server 2003 in a few years(or the newest system then) as the company grows. I set up and wired everything the only problem I am having is with the router. I set the router on a different subnet, 192.168.20.1 than the server & clients 192.168.0.1 - 192.168.0.2-x I disabled DHCP to allow the router to act as a switch and file sharing and the internet work great. I made the internet address of the router 192.168.0.2 and subnet mask 255.255.0.0 and gateway 192.168.0.1 However I cannot login to the router to make any changes that I might need without resetting it and then reconfiguring it all again. Clients are set to autoconfigure router & server are set static What do I do to login into the router??!? Thanks in advance. On 17 Oct 2006 22:42:14 -0700, scott_***@hotmail.com wrote:
Show quoteHide quote >I am looking to set up a network in my office To be useful, you put the router LAN on the same subnet as the clients. Routers> >I need a config like this: > >modem -- (firewall eventually) -- server -- router -- clients > >Right now I am going to configure this using winxp but will upgrade to >Server 2003 in a few years(or the newest system then) as the company >grows. > >I set up and wired everything the only problem I am having is with the >router. > >I set the router on a different subnet, 192.168.20.1 than the server & >clients >192.168.0.1 - 192.168.0.2-x > >I disabled DHCP to allow the router to act as a switch and file sharing >and the >internet work great. > >I made the internet address of the router 192.168.0.2 and >subnet mask 255.255.0.0 and gateway 192.168.0.1 > >However I cannot login to the router to make any changes that >I might need without resetting it and then reconfiguring it all again. > > >Clients are set to autoconfigure router & server are set static > >What do I do to login into the router??!? route traffic from one subnet to another, and the router port has to be on the same subnet as the clients. What are you accomplishing by putting the router on a different subnet? How does the router connect, electrically, to the Internet? To login to the router, a computer has to be on the same subnet. Shutting DHCP off doesn't make a router into a switch. You have to shut NAT Off, either by putting the router into bridge mode (as you can do with some), or by connecting the LAN and not connecting the WAN. But the NAT function doesn't require DHCP. -- Cheers, Chuck, MS-MVP [Windows - Networking] http://nitecruzr.blogspot.com/ Paranoia is not a problem, when it's a normal response from experience. My email is AT DOT actual address pchuck mvps org. |
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