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Frank Zavelberg wrote: >Hello! > > > >>So to get this right you have >>Internet<----Main Router (10.0.0.25)<------(10.0.0.1)M0n0wall >>(10.0.0.35)<----Workstaion(10.0.0.1)? >> >> > >No, it's like this: > >Switch --+--- DSL-Modem -------------------- Internet > | | > | +--- Server (10.0.0.10) > | | > | +--- Fli-Router (10.0.0.25) > | | > | +--- Dad's workstation (10.0.0.5) > | > | >Switch --+--- My Workstation (10.0.0.1) > | > +--- MW-Testrouter (10.0.0.35) > | > +--- Notebook (10.0.0.2) > | > +--- WLAN Access Point > > >So, it all forms one big ethernet. The MW-router can directly see the >DSL-modem for PPPoE. I just called it "main router" cause I wanted to >test MW parallel to my "real" router, as not to interrupt internet >connection to my server while doing so. It's not meant to get an IP >from the Fli-router (though it probably does so when its WAN is set to >DHCP). But the Fli won't give it the 10.0.0.1 via DHCP, the range is >set to 10.0.0.100-10.0.0.199. > > > > Can you put the modem on a switch with just the two routers on it? This may help some. After the two routers are they serving the same network or do you have two different networks with the same subnets? Which router is in charge of DHCP? Ethan |