joek Wrote:
> In this case, you may have problems with a router trying to provide a
> dhcp ip mapped to a specific MAC address when the device is behind the
> SB3 bridge.
>
> In small environments, there is no need to use dhcp unless you are
> moving devices between networks (i.e. laptop).
I'm
In my experience and with some research I don't believe your router will
see the MAC address of the network device bridged through your SB3. I've
used multiple routers with multiple different bridge wireless clients
all with the same results.
I have a Tivo bridged through my SB3 and the router on
When I just plugged in a cable, nothing happened, as you wrote. If it
was connected to something powered I got that question, and could
disable bridging - which was enabled before.
When I earlier checked "Current Network Settings" it said "Bridge
wireless to ethernet: Yes". Now it says no.
It SH
tommypeters Wrote:
> OK, so I need to plug something in to be able to turn it off. I'll check
> if it's enough with just plugging in a cable, or a cable connected to
> something powered on - I guess the former.
If you don't have anything plugged in it was never enabled in the first
place.
If yo
OK, so I need to plug something in to be able to turn it off. I'll check
if it's enough with just plugging in a cable, or a cable connected to
something powered on - I guess the former.
--
tommypeters
tommypeters's Profile
tommypeters Wrote:
> BTW, after the original setup you can go back to network setup by
> holding the LEFT button. But if wireless bridging is turned on I don't
> see a way to turn it off. Maybe if I would connect it to a wired
> network so I'm able to select wired networking, then later changing
BTW, after the original setup you can go back to network setup by
holding the LEFT button. But if wireless bridging is turned on I don't
see a way to turn it off. Maybe if I would connect it to a wired
network so I'm able to select wired networking, then later changing
wireless network again - may
Deaf Cat Wrote:
> Mark, I take it you get no losses, when pinging?
No losses that I can recall with the SB as a bridge. It seems the
first ping is the longest, something needs to "wake up" to respond to
further pings.
--
Mark Lanctot
--
Ah I'm still at the starting blocks I'm afraid, not got as far a using
the SB as a bridge yet, just sorting getting the things talking to each
other through the router with no low level cock ups at the moment.
Still getting 25% loss now and then when pinging the laptop from the
desk top but the o
Deaf Cat:
Which device is going through an SB as a wireless bridge?
I can recall that ping times through the SB weren't bad, 1-4 ms.
As I said, speed doesn't seem to be the problem, something else is.
--
Mark Lanctot
Ma
Could not wait:
D pinging SB 4 4 0 1ms
L pinging SB 4 4 0 179ms / 5ms / 7ms
To work :)
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Deaf Cat
Deaf Cat's Profile: http://forums.slimdevices.com/member.php?userid=515
View this thread: http://forums.slimdevice
Hiya :)
I hope you don't mind me joining in a bit, I've tried some pinging
here:
Laptop = L
Desk top = D
Ping loopback address 127.0.0.1
L - sent 4 received 4 lost 0% average 0ms
D - same
Ping own address
L - same
D - same
Ping gateway
L - sent 4 received 4 lost 0% ave 4ms
D - same
Well cancel the red alert.
As soon as I wire the Ubuntu PC directly into the router, everything
works as expected. File sharing from/to, SlimServer web GUI,
everything.
This points the finger at the SB3, unfortunately. It's strange - it
works fine for Internet access, downloading files at ~315
Thanks MrC. I was afraid I'd have to resort to low-level diagnostics.
I have some work to do this afternoon and will start attacking this
later.
Thanks for your help.
--
Mark Lanctot
Mark Lanctot's Profile: http://forum
Mark,
Debug your network troubles at a lower level, since the lowest layers
are required to work correctly before higher services can. Forget
samba, browsers, etc. for the time being.
This could be a number of problems. Your fast to WAN, slow to LAN
speeds can be misleading because your broadb
Bump!
I tried adding the NIC's MAC address to the wireless client MAC address
list. My router isn't reporting seeing it, but I'm still having LAN
issues so something is going on.
--
Mark Lanctot
Mark Lanctot's Profile: h
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