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CommentsAll Comments on: How do I configure my static IP address?
Read the article that everyone's commenting on. i would like to configure my static ip address for my single PC. plz help me Posted by: judith at June 26, 2005 10:08 PMWhen assigning a static IP address to a server on your LAN, behind a router, there is more to it than simply chosing an IP address outside of the DHCP range given out by the router. It also should be within the same subnet so that other computers on your LAN can see the server. Subnetting is a whole 'nother subject, but in the example given, had the server been assigned 192.168.2.2 or 192.168.3.2 it would not have worked. That is, the static IP has to begin with 192.168.1 (in this particular case due to the subnet mask). I have a wireless router, and it does not allow other users to connect to my computer e.g. say i have a gaming server up. no one out of my network can connect to my server, how do i foward my ip or allow other clients to join my computer Posted by: kaan at August 18, 2005 10:51 AMYou need to open up the ports that the gaming server needs on your router, and indicate which of your machines that traffic should go to. It's called "port forwarding" in most cases. I can't be too much more specific than that because the ports needed will vary based on your game, and how you set it up will vary based on your router. But hopefully documentation for both will allow you to get there from here. Posted by: Leo at August 18, 2005 4:38 PMI have a wireless LAN and I am fond of playing multiplayer games online. The thing is whenever I play them, I get disconnected from the game server that I connect to and also get disconnected from the wireless network (yes, that means no internet unless I go to disable the network connection and re-enable it again). Now, I've read that in order for games to work, I needed to configure their specific game ports. And so I did but I still keep disconnected. I have dynamic IP addresses and when I configrured the game ports, I only listed the first two out of the four possible IP addresses I can obtain(note that it's dynamic). Is there anything that I missed? Thanks for the help. Posted by: Jester at September 4, 2005 1:47 PMI set up my router using a static IP address from my ISP. My PC works fine when I set up the dailup connection properly, but is there a way to set up a wireless laptop? Once I change the router to static IP I can't connect through to the internet with the wirless laptop. I see the network and everything else is fine...Can you help? THANKS Posted by: John at September 15, 2005 8:23 AMWell, it's hard to say because I don't have a clear picture of what you've set up. Your router should be using a static IP from your ISP on the WAN connection. But you want your computers to use dynamic IPs, which would be provided by the router. Make sure that the router has DHCP enabled for the LAN side. That's actually exactly how I operate here at home. Posted by: Leo at September 15, 2005 4:33 PMHi Leo, I am preparing for my CCNA certification. I purchased used Cisco routers and switches for my home lab to practice on. I did set up my home lab network and configured all the interfaces with private IP addresses, which I randomly picked, and also configured them with routing protocols (rip and igrp). The configuration is fine within my network (between my Cisco routers and switches), and they are exchanging information. However, I could not make them talk to my internet connected computers. I have two computers, which are connected to internet using Linksys VoIP broadband router and cable modem configured using DHCP/auto IP. The Linksys router has 3 ports for connecting to computers and 2 ports for telephone line. This router also assigns up to 50 private DHCP IP addresses. I am trying to use these new IP addresses to reconfigure my home lab network routers and switches interfaces. How should I approach it so that I can reconfigure my lab network interfaces with the new IP addresses and also establish communication between my lab network and computers? Any help or suggestions you can offer is greatly appreciated. Thanks Sir, I am very new so I am wondering if it is possible to set up a pc as a web server without having it part of my network even though it is using the same internet connection. At work I have 3 windows pcs connected to a network via adsl modem/router. I would like to have a seperate pc running linux set up as a web server using the static ip assigned by my IP, without having it connected to the network. Does this make sense? Posted by: Jamie at September 22, 2005 3:02 PM
Read the article that everyone's commenting on.
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