Router Routing (switching)

Hey Well I dont have any problems setting up an advanced LAN, but i have some routers which refuses to work together. I would have used a switch instead, but i cant, så i have to use one router, disable the first DHCP server in router nr and retrieve ips from the second router.

Windows Networking 2246 This topic was started by ,



data/avatar/default/avatar11.webp

159 Posts
Location -
Joined 2004-10-24
Hey
 
Well I dont have any problems setting up an advanced LAN, but i have some routers which refuses to work together.
I would have used a switch instead, but i cant, så i have to use one router, disable the first DHCP server in router nr and retrieve ips from the second router.
 
The problem is this that the first and second router refuses to co-excist, and instead of release/renew on the clients all that happens is that the router nr.1 gets renewed, which ofcourse is against my will and will limit my connections.
 
Is there a way to disable the routing function all together?
 
For example, if i set up 1 WiFi router access point (only allowing MAC from router nr1 and its IP+pass), which router nr 1 is locket up too, from there i will use ethernet cables to other clients (routers/pcs). but routers connected to nr1 have serious co-excist problems.
 
Makes me mad, any clever work arounds?
 
Best Regards
Eirik

Participate on our website and join the conversation

You have already an account on our website? Use the link below to login.
Login
Create a new user account. Registration is free and takes only a few seconds.
Register
This topic is archived. New comments cannot be posted and votes cannot be cast.

Responses to this topic



data/avatar/default/avatar11.webp

159 Posts
Location -
Joined 2004-10-24
OP
Come on people? no help? =/


data/avatar/default/avatar11.webp

159 Posts
Location -
Joined 2004-10-24
OP
Never mind guys. I fixed it myself. Thanks.


data/avatar/default/avatar39.webp

9 Posts
Location -
Joined 2012-06-30
If the destination network matches a network to which the router is attached, the router forwards the packet to the destination host by addressing the packet to the destination host's physical address. The router performs a direct delivery to the destination.Conversely, if the destination network is not directly attached, the router forwards the packet to an intermediate router. The intermediate router chosen is based on the forwarding address of the optimal route in the routing table. The router forwards the packet by addressing the packet to the intermediate router's physical address. The router performs an indirect delivery to the next router in the path to the destination. Web vulnerability scanning