On Thursday 08 February 2007 22:32, Mikkel L. Ellertson wrote: > linuxmaillists@xxxxxxxxxxx wrote: > > I have wired router A (linksys BEFSX41 latest firmware) and > > connected to it are computers A (FC6), B (FC6) & C (FC6) > > and wireless router B (linksys WRT54G latest firmware) with > > wireless computer D (WinXP Home) connecting to it. I have > > googled with no luck finding my solution. I can access the > > web interface on wired router A from computers A, B or C. > > What I can't figure out how to do is access the web > > interface of wireless router B from computers A, B or C. I > > can access the web interface on router B with computer D. > > What I want is to be able to communicate across the two > > routers and the computers connected on each router. Can > > some one point me in the right direction to resolve this? > > How is router B connected to router A? If you are using the WAN port > on router B to connect to router A, then the only way you will be > able to access the WEB interface is if you have remote > administration enabled on router B. > > I don't know the specs on the Linksys WRT54G off hand, but I think > it is a 4 port router as well as wireless. What you may want to do > is configure it as an access point, and connect one of the LAN ports > to router A. You will then be able to access the WEB configuration > page. It will have a different IP address - you can ether set it in > the configuration, or have router A assign one. One thing to be > careful about when using this setup is to only have a DHCP server > running on one of the routers. The normal setup is to have it > running on router A. (The one connected to the Internet.) > I have a system very similar to the one described here, and I believe that Mikkel was one of the people that helped me get it set up. The trick is to ignore the WAN side altogether on router B. Use one of the LAN ports to plug it into the existing wired LAN. My router A is 192.168.0.1 and router B is 192.168.0.5. I use fixed IP throughout. with DHCP being served outside the 'reserved addresses' for visiting laptops. The gateway on everything must be set to 192.168.0.1 - the primary router address. HTH. Ask if I can give any more info. Incidentally, both routers are using WPA-PSK, and my Acer laptop has no problems with it. Anne
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