[AccessD] OT: Three routers, weird problems

Jim Lawrence accessd at shaw.ca
Mon Feb 20 21:30:50 CST 2012


John, you can turn your cheap router into Cisco-like fully programmable
router. Here is the link:

http://lifehacker.com/178132/hack-attack-turn-your-60-router-into-a-600-rout
er
...and...
http://lifehacker.com/344765/turn-your-60-router-into-a-user+friendly-super+
router-with-tomato

Check here to see if your router is supported:
http://www.dd-wrt.com/wiki/index.php/Supported_Devices

If you really want to go nuts here are a list of various router upgrades:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_router_or_firewall_distributions

Am I sure it will help you? Not sure but probably.

Would have upgraded mine but it was the only DLink that could not be
upgraded...Probably just as well. :-(

Jim


-----Original Message-----
From: accessd-bounces at databaseadvisors.com
[mailto:accessd-bounces at databaseadvisors.com] On Behalf Of jwcolby
Sent: Monday, February 20, 2012 7:05 PM
To: Access Developers discussion and problem solving
Subject: Re: [AccessD] OT: Three routers, weird problems

You're gonna love this one.  The new router DHCP default begin ip address is
192.168.0.10 and the 
default end is 192.168.0.19.

NINE stinking addresses available by default.  All of my other routers have
defaulted to 09-99.  So 
basically I just manually set the ending address to 99 and rebooted the
router and voila, at least 
some of my issues are gone.  I was struggling for the last hour to get one
of my laptops to get an 
IP address, it just wouldn't.  Now I know why!  Once I opened up the range
it immediately grapped 
one, I didn't even have to do a release / renew.

NINE STINKIN IP addresses available by default.  It just never occurred to
me to check that as I was 
setting it up.  I have never in all my years seen 19 used as the last
available IP.

John W. Colby
Colby Consulting

Reality is what refuses to go away
when you do not believe in it

On 2/20/2012 6:05 PM, Jim Dettman wrote:
> <<In point of fact, now that I think of it, I do not know how
> to specifically "turn off" the WAN, I just don't use it, connecting all
> cables to the switch side of
> the device.>>
>
>   That's the ticket!
>
> <<That
> should not be possible, since C2Db3 is not the DHCP server.  C2Db3 is one
of
> the WRT54GS routers
> which is now only a switch and wireless access point.  The laptop does not
> connect to C2Db3
> (directly)  though C2Db3 is plugged into the same gigabit switch as the
> laptop (up in my office).>>
>
>   It's running it's connection through the wireless instead of the wired.
> Turn your wireless modem off in on the laptop and it will switch to the
> wired connection.
>
>   DHCP is separate from the connection point.
>
> Jim.
>
>
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: accessd-bounces at databaseadvisors.com
> [mailto:accessd-bounces at databaseadvisors.com] On Behalf Of jwcolby
> Sent: Monday, February 20, 2012 12:42 PM
> To: Access Developers discussion and problem solving
> Subject: [AccessD] OT: Three routers, weird problems
>
> I have a SOHO.  Yesterday the cable company came in to replace the cable
> modem and replaced it with
> an integrated modem / router / wireless.  I like it!  It has guest
networks
> and so forth, very modern.
>
> I use 192.168.122.1 as that base router's IP and the range 10-100 as the
> addresses dished out to
> computers, and I set all that up, turned on encryption, set  the SSID to
> C2Db1, all the typical
> setup stuff.
>
> I have a pair of wrt54gs routers / wireless.  I have in the past put them
on
> the network as access
> points on either end of the house to allow better wireless access around
the
> house.   I know how to
> turn off DHCP server in the access points, set the IP of the access point
> router to a fixed address,
> for which I use 192.168.122.2 / .3 etc.  I set the SSID to unique values
> C2Db2 and C2Db3 so I can
> identify each one for connecting.  So I set up two of these "access
points"
> using two wrt54gs
> routers with the wan / DHCP turned off.  In point of fact, now that I
think
> of it, I do not know how
> to specifically "turn off" the WAN, I just don't use it, connecting all
> cables to the switch side of
> the device.
>
> So now comes the strange thing.
>
> I rebooted and my laptop's wired NIC says it is connecting to the Local
Area
> Connection C2Db3.  That
> should not be possible, since C2Db3 is not the DHCP server.  C2Db3 is one
of
> the WRT54GS routers
> which is now only a switch and wireless access point.  The laptop does not
> connect to C2Db3
> (directly)  though C2Db3 is plugged into the same gigabit switch as the
> laptop (up in my office).
>
> The connection does work, and it gets out to the internet, it is just
> confusing to me.  I expected
> that all of my computers with wired connections to switches would show
C2Db1
> as the network, and any
> wireless NECS would show the name of the wireless access point that they
> came in under.
>
> Just as an aside, the "show network map" fails miserably and immediately.
> All of my switches are
> dumb (unmanaged) so I was really only expecting perhaps a basic picture of
> the network, but nope,
> nothing at all except an error message.
>
> Just as an aside, I have an 8 port gigabit in my office on the second
floor
> at one end of the house,
> connected to a 4 port gigabit switch in the basement at the center of the
> house.  That 4 port is
> connected to the new cable modem / router to get at the internet, and is
> also connected to an 8 port
> gigabit switch at the other end of the house (relative to my office).  I
> recently "wired the house"
> (myself) putting boxes in the walls of many of the rooms and running
> physical cables to the closest
> switches.  It would have been nice to just have a 24 port switch and run
> cables all the way to that
> switch but that was not to be.
>
> Anyhoo, I was wondering what the heck the C2Db3 actually means in terms of
> what my laptop thinks it
> is doing / connecting to with it's wired NIC.
>

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