On Thu, 2007-02-08 at 17:27 -0500, linuxmaillists@xxxxxxxxxxx wrote: > On Thursday 08 February 2007 17:03, > 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? > > > > Router A LAN side 192.168.X.100 - 192.168.X.105 > > Gateway 192.168.X.10 subnet mask 255.255.255.128 > > Router B 192.168.X.100 > Computer A 192.168.X.101 > Computer B 192.168.X.102 > Computer C 192.168.X.103 > > > Router B LAN side 192.168.2.1 WAN side 192.168.X.100 > > Gateway 192.168.2.1 subnet mask 255.255.255.0 > > Computer D 192.168.2.100 > > I can type in 192.168.2.1 in the web browser on computer D > and get to the web interface on router B. > > What do I need to type in the browser from computer A, B or > C to get to the web interface on router B? On the surface what you want to do seems impossiblle.. The addresses starting with 192.168 are internal addresses not available to the external world. They are not reachable from outside the lan. You could route all the port 80 traffic to the external address of the router to the internal interface of the router. In principle that would work but it would also mean that people from everywhere could reach the web browser of your router. -- Aaron Konstam <akonstam@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>