Re: Dealing with multiple layers of routers

2006-06-08 Thread Tom Buskey
On 6/7/06, John Abreau [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: Bill Freeman wrote: The chart that I read showed the V4 to have half as much of each kind of memory as the V3.No other important differences.Or my memory (in my head) may be failing if you have to go back further to get a full memory WRT54G.Where

Re: Dealing with multiple layers of routers

2006-06-08 Thread Travis Roy
Now, the wrt54G has always been 16/4 until the switch to VXworks w/ v5 The wrt54GS was 32/8 until it went 16/4 with v4.0 and 16/2 with v5 and VXworks.If you want to buy a new, linux version, the wrt54GL still runs linux (that's the L) and is 16/4 like the wrt54G v4So, the bad news is that they

Re: Dealing with multiple layers of routers

2006-06-08 Thread Kevin D. Clark
Travis Roy writes: Plus you can always mount a share if you need more space for logging or whatnot. Doesn't dd-wrt come with syslog? Wouldn't it be better to syslog - network - logging server? Regards, --kevin -- GnuPG ID: B280F24E And the madness of the crowd

Re: Dealing with multiple layers of routers

2006-06-08 Thread Bill Freeman
Bill Freeman wrote: The chart that I read showed the V4 to have half as much of each kind of memory as the V3. No other important differences. Or my memory (in my head) may be failing if you have to go back further to get a full memory WRT54G. Where did you find that chart?

Dealing with multiple layers of routers

2006-06-07 Thread Bill Freeman
Where I'm working we have a Netgear router attached to the DSL modem, to which all the wired users are connected, with NAT and DHCP serving up 192.168.0.xxx addresses. One of the things wired to the Netgear is the internet port of a Linksys wireless-G router (probably too new to install Linux on

Re: Dealing with multiple layers of routers

2006-06-07 Thread Travis Roy
One of the things wired to the Netgear is the internet port of aLinksys wireless-G router (probably too new to install Linux on it), which serves up a wireless network on 192.168.1.xxx.I would check the dd-wrt website and see if you can install linux on it, you might luck out.What I would do is

Re: Dealing with multiple layers of routers

2006-06-07 Thread Bill Freeman
One of the things wired to the Netgear is the internet port of a Linksys wireless-G router (probably too new to install Linux on it), which serves up a wireless network on 192.168.1.xxx. I would check the dd-wrt website and see if you can install linux on it, you might luck out.

Re: Dealing with multiple layers of routers

2006-06-07 Thread Neil Schelly
On Wednesday 07 June 2006 12:09 pm, Bill Freeman wrote: I think that what I need to do is disable NAT and firewall on the Linksys. (We would still be protected from the internet by the firewall in the Netgear.) If that's possible. Then would I be able to configure the Netgear's DHCP server

Re: Dealing with multiple layers of routers

2006-06-07 Thread Tom Buskey
On 6/7/06, Bill Freeman [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: Where I'm working we have a Netgear router attached to the DSL modem,to which all the wired users are connected, with NAT and DHCP servingup 192.168.0.xxx addresses.One of the things wired to the Netgear is the internet port of a Linksys wireless-G

Re: Dealing with multiple layers of routers

2006-06-07 Thread Michael ODonnell
I will probably get around to playing with this on one of my personal V4 WRT54GSs, but I'm disinclined to give one of these to the company, given how hard it has been for me to find them. (I'd really like to own a V3, the last max memory model, but I haven't seen one.) I'm interested to

Re: Dealing with multiple layers of routers

2006-06-07 Thread Lloyd Kvam
On Wed, 2006-06-07 at 12:09 -0400, Bill Freeman wrote: Where I'm working we have a Netgear router attached to the DSL modem, to which all the wired users are connected, with NAT and DHCP serving up 192.168.0.xxx addresses. One of the things wired to the Netgear is the internet port of a

Re: Dealing with multiple layers of routers

2006-06-07 Thread Python
On Wed, 2006-06-07 at 12:09 -0400, Bill Freeman wrote: Where I'm working we have a Netgear router attached to the DSL modem, to which all the wired users are connected, with NAT and DHCP serving up 192.168.0.xxx addresses. One of the things wired to the Netgear is the internet port of a

Re: Dealing with multiple layers of routers

2006-06-07 Thread Travis Roy
I'm interested to hear that you wish you could own a V3 becausewhen I look at the charts shown here: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/WRT54G...I don't see important differences between the V3 and V4.Are the charts misleading? He's probably thinking of the WRT54GS, the memory amounts go down after

Re: Dealing with multiple layers of routers

2006-06-07 Thread Bill Freeman
Lloyd Kvam offered opinions and advice, thanks. Presumably you are controlling the DHCP assignments so that your Name Server knows how to resolve names to numbers and DNS is not tied into those routers. The name server here is Hey, Jim, what's your IP address today, so it won't have any

Re: Dealing with multiple layers of routers

2006-06-07 Thread Bill Freeman
I will probably get around to playing with this on one of my personal V4 WRT54GSs, but I'm disinclined to give one of these to the company, given how hard it has been for me to find them. (I'd really like to own a V3, the last max memory model, but I haven't seen one.) I'm

Re: Dealing with multiple layers of routers

2006-06-07 Thread John Abreau
Bill Freeman wrote: The chart that I read showed the V4 to have half as much of each kind of memory as the V3. No other important differences. Or my memory (in my head) may be failing if you have to go back further to get a full memory WRT54G. Where did you find that chart? The one I

Re: Dealing with multiple layers of routers

2006-06-07 Thread Jeff Kinz
On Wed, Jun 07, 2006 at 05:03:00PM -0400, John Abreau wrote: Bill Freeman wrote: The chart that I read showed the V4 to have half as much of each kind of memory as the V3. No other important differences. Or my memory (in my head) may be failing if you have to go back further to get a

Re: Dealing with multiple layers of routers

2006-06-07 Thread Ben Scott
On 6/7/06, Bill Freeman [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: I think that what I need to do is disable NAT and firewall on the Linksys. Supposedly, this is possible with some LinkSys routers. My WRT54G v2 with LinkSys firmware 4.20.7 has it under Setup - Advanced Routing - Operating Mode. Setting that