On Fri, 2009-06-19 at 15:52 +0930, Tim wrote: > On Thu, 2009-06-18 at 14:40 -0700, Gerhard Magnus wrote: > > I recently added a D-Link wireless router to a network in which > > everything (except a new netbook computer) is connected by ethernet > > cables. I also use static addresses. Here's the setup: > > > > DSL modem --> Linksys router --> D-Link router --> wireless netbook > > | > > -----------> eternetted computers > > > > Using a browser on the netbook I can access configuration menus for both > > routers, which seems to indicate that the wireless network was set up > > correctly and that the cable between the two routers is working. > > I use the same set up, also with a D-link wireless router. (Not too > thrilled with it, I think their web configurator is a nightmare.) > > > I cannot access the configuration menu of the DSL modem from the > > netbook, although I can do this from any of the other computers. > > That's common enough, it stops neighbours reconfiguring your router, > remotely, by accident (e.g. if you have an unencrypted link), or by > subterfuge (e.g. if they crack low grade encryption), since it's simply > not accessible to them. There's a configuration option on many wireless > routers about whether the configurator can only be accessed over the > wired connection. Generally, this is a good idea. > > On some devices, they come preconfigured to use no encryption and allow > remote configuration over the wireless connection. The first time a > user configures their wireless device, they broadcast all their > passwords in the clear, for anyone around them to hear. I make the > first connection using a cable, then turn off the remote wireless access > until I've finished securing the device. > > > Consistent with this, I cannot access the Internet from the netbook, > > either with named or with IP addresses. > > Perhaps that's down to you using static addressing? On my system, I > have a central DHCP server, and that tells all devices what the > addresses and routes are. But the LAN side of my D-link doesn't seem to > work with DHCP, I set *it* manually, the rest of my system is automatic. > > If you manually configure a device, you may have forgotten to set a > route. If the wireless router is acting as a router, rather than as a > dumb access point, it may not relay traffic through unless you've > configured it with a gateway address. > > My D-link has manually set into it: > its own address > its netmask > gateway address (my modem/router's LAN address, it's my gateway to > the ISP) > > I'm guessing that you've missed the last one. Set your Linksys router's > LAN IP address as your D-Link router's gateway address. But where? I must be missing something obvious.... My D-link is a DIR-615. There seems to be only one relevant screen on the configuration menu for network settings and it has these options: Router Settings Router IP Address: 192.168.1.2 Subnet Mask: 255.255.255.0 Device Name: dlinkrouter Local Domain Name: SMAssociates Enable DNS Relay: checked DHCP Server Settings Enable DHCP Server: unchecked (this leaves the other options blank) DHCP IP Address Range: DHCP Lease Time: Always broadcast: NetBIOS announcement: Learn NetBIOS from WAN: NetBIOS Scope: NetBIOS node type: Primary WINS IP Address: Seconday WINS IP Address: The "Advanced" page has entries for a list of virtual services (unused.) The "Tools" page has password-setting and remote management menus. And then there's "Gateway Name" which defaults to DIR-615 and doesn't seem to be the place to put a gateway IP address. -- fedora-list mailing list fedora-list@xxxxxxxxxx To unsubscribe: https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/fedora-list Guidelines: http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Communicate/MailingListGuidelines