Thanks in advance for seeing if you can solve this one.
At the following link is a diagram of how I would like to
expand my small LAN.
My cable ISP won't help with router configuration beyond
just getting me online. No sweat to them if my router
simply takes their plain vanilla DHCP
IP assignment(s) of 192.168.0.1 as the gateway.
Which leaves me on my own (Which could be dangerous,
given I don't understand TCP/IP all that well.)
Okay so 192.168.0.1 becomes the gateway addy. Cool.
From old parts I get the Win98 running, slap a NIC into
all 4 machines and in "Windows connection properties" -
"TCP/IP" - "Properties" I set these 4 primary NICs up
to match the initial DHCP assignments from
the router. So far so good. The 4 PC's (NICs) all see each other
when pinged, plus they all show up in Computers Near Me.
Now for the tricky part...
My understanding is that with the router set up this way,
all 4 of these primary NICS are basically still using
"""Dynamic""" (not Static) IP's. 192...2 thru 192....6.
Static IP addresses are necessary for installing and
running a DNS nameserver. Like BIND for example. Better tho is
SimpleDNS Plus, which can run on a stand-alone, multi-NIC,
W2k Pro machine.
But I don't want to ruin the LAN.
In theory the 2 additional Win2k NICs would each own
Static IP addresses.
Trouble is that for some reason, if I add a "switch"
or a "hub" (where the "??question mark??" is
in my diagram.... and if I give those two NICs IP
addresses in (non-192.x.x.x) 172.16.0.1 or
254.169.x.x private IP ranges, then the two
Win98 machines refuse to ping any non-192.168.0.x
(non-255.255.255.0 subnet mask of) I give to those
two NIC cards. Even as such addresses will
show up fine on an "ipconfig/all".
Just weird how at the same time the Win2k machines
will ping those very same NICs/addresses just fine,
but the Win98 machines won't. Instead the 98 machines
will only ping to the "Request timed out" message.
I am so close yet so far away. Just wondering if a
second router located at my diagram's ??question mark??
would get all the IP addresses seeing each other, no matter
what range of addresses I assign, or what OS I'm pinging from.
Again, thanks verry much if anyone can gimme a clue on this.
Sharon
At the following link is a diagram of how I would like to
expand my small LAN.
My cable ISP won't help with router configuration beyond
just getting me online. No sweat to them if my router
simply takes their plain vanilla DHCP
IP assignment(s) of 192.168.0.1 as the gateway.
Which leaves me on my own (Which could be dangerous,
given I don't understand TCP/IP all that well.)
Okay so 192.168.0.1 becomes the gateway addy. Cool.
From old parts I get the Win98 running, slap a NIC into
all 4 machines and in "Windows connection properties" -
"TCP/IP" - "Properties" I set these 4 primary NICs up
to match the initial DHCP assignments from
the router. So far so good. The 4 PC's (NICs) all see each other
when pinged, plus they all show up in Computers Near Me.
Now for the tricky part...
My understanding is that with the router set up this way,
all 4 of these primary NICS are basically still using
"""Dynamic""" (not Static) IP's. 192...2 thru 192....6.
Static IP addresses are necessary for installing and
running a DNS nameserver. Like BIND for example. Better tho is
SimpleDNS Plus, which can run on a stand-alone, multi-NIC,
W2k Pro machine.
But I don't want to ruin the LAN.
In theory the 2 additional Win2k NICs would each own
Static IP addresses.
Trouble is that for some reason, if I add a "switch"
or a "hub" (where the "??question mark??" is
in my diagram.... and if I give those two NICs IP
addresses in (non-192.x.x.x) 172.16.0.1 or
254.169.x.x private IP ranges, then the two
Win98 machines refuse to ping any non-192.168.0.x
(non-255.255.255.0 subnet mask of) I give to those
two NIC cards. Even as such addresses will
show up fine on an "ipconfig/all".
Just weird how at the same time the Win2k machines
will ping those very same NICs/addresses just fine,
but the Win98 machines won't. Instead the 98 machines
will only ping to the "Request timed out" message.
I am so close yet so far away. Just wondering if a
second router located at my diagram's ??question mark??
would get all the IP addresses seeing each other, no matter
what range of addresses I assign, or what OS I'm pinging from.
Again, thanks verry much if anyone can gimme a clue on this.
Sharon