different ranges of IP addresses

Roman Sourinovich

Reputable
Aug 8, 2015
1
0
4,510
I have two networks at my office.
And I need to connect the IP address 192.168.2.167 to network with address range 192.168.1.x

How can I do this?

Thanks alot.
 
Solution
That is the definition of a router.

Problem is the boxes you buy in the stores are not actually routers even though every box says that. Those devices are designed to connect a single lan network to the internet. They are better called gateways.

What you need is a true router. There might be a consumer grade "gateway" that has the simple ability to route between 2 networks but it would take massive digging though the details.

The exact solution will depend on what other functions you need.

The general solution when used inside a single office to connect different lan networks is to use a layer 3 switch. This is in a way just another name for a router but there are small difference that I will ignore. Layer 3 switches tends...
That is the definition of a router.

Problem is the boxes you buy in the stores are not actually routers even though every box says that. Those devices are designed to connect a single lan network to the internet. They are better called gateways.

What you need is a true router. There might be a consumer grade "gateway" that has the simple ability to route between 2 networks but it would take massive digging though the details.

The exact solution will depend on what other functions you need.

The general solution when used inside a single office to connect different lan networks is to use a layer 3 switch. This is in a way just another name for a router but there are small difference that I will ignore. Layer 3 switches tends to be faster than a router.

It really depends on how much money you have to spend and what type of performance you need and any other features.

The cheapest and simplest way for a small installation is to load third party firmware like dd-wrt onto a consumer "gateway". This software will add all the features of a true router. It of course is much more complex to configure which is one of the key reasons consumer devices have eliminated the features most people will never use.
 
Solution

molletts

Distinguished
Jun 16, 2009
475
4
19,165
In a pinch, you can configure a Windows PC as a router, but performance won't be stellar. Linux does a better job but your best bet is to use a switch that has "static routing" capability. It will be much cheaper than a dedicated router and will usually have better performance than all but the most expensive routers (try finding an affordable router that can route traffic at wire speed on a gigabit network).

Any Layer 2+ switch should do this, but some cheaper "smart" units also support static routing - for example, the Netgear GS748Tv4 and a few others in the range.

Stephen
 

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