I just spent two days figuring this out and thought someone else might find the solution helpful.
I wanted to have an 802.11b (wireless) segment of a lan connect to/thru a WinXP Pro computer to the DLS connection that is enabled thru a Linksys router/hub. I also wanted the wireless segment to "see" the rest of the network's (other computers) shared resources.
The config is as follows:
Win XP Pro with a NIC card connected to a Linksys BEFSR41 DSL router/hub, which in turn connects to a DSL connection (router) and other ethernet machines thru the 'hub' component of the LINKSYS. . There is also a Cisco Wireless 340 PCI card in the Win XP machine.
A second machine is a Win 98 SE machine with a Cisco Wireless 340 PCMCIA card installed.
Both 340 cards are set up as "ad-hoc".
1 more machine is connected to the Ethernet hub thru an 802.3 NIC.
I have disabled DHCP on the LinkSys router and have set all the NICs and Wireless devices with static IP address in the 192.168.1.n range, subnet 255.255.255.0.
Just a simple home network right!
The way to configure this to work is to setup a Network Bridge between the NIC card and the Wireless card. See "Network Connections" on Win XP.
The "trick" is to make the Network Bridge a part of the same network subnet as the rest of the NIC cards, routers, and wireless equipment in the network. Microsoft sets the 169.254.n.n subnet for the bridge by default. All I had to do (after much head scraching X-) ! ) was set the Network Bridge's TCP/IP properties to a network address in the same subnet as the rest of my equipment. (Rt click Network Bridge, select properties, select "Internet Protocol (TCP/IP)" and click properties, then select the "Use the following IP address" button and enter an available IP address in your subnet along with the proper subnet mask and default gateway.)
I hope this helps someone else!
I wanted to have an 802.11b (wireless) segment of a lan connect to/thru a WinXP Pro computer to the DLS connection that is enabled thru a Linksys router/hub. I also wanted the wireless segment to "see" the rest of the network's (other computers) shared resources.
The config is as follows:
Win XP Pro with a NIC card connected to a Linksys BEFSR41 DSL router/hub, which in turn connects to a DSL connection (router) and other ethernet machines thru the 'hub' component of the LINKSYS. . There is also a Cisco Wireless 340 PCI card in the Win XP machine.
A second machine is a Win 98 SE machine with a Cisco Wireless 340 PCMCIA card installed.
Both 340 cards are set up as "ad-hoc".
1 more machine is connected to the Ethernet hub thru an 802.3 NIC.
I have disabled DHCP on the LinkSys router and have set all the NICs and Wireless devices with static IP address in the 192.168.1.n range, subnet 255.255.255.0.
Just a simple home network right!
The way to configure this to work is to setup a Network Bridge between the NIC card and the Wireless card. See "Network Connections" on Win XP.
The "trick" is to make the Network Bridge a part of the same network subnet as the rest of the NIC cards, routers, and wireless equipment in the network. Microsoft sets the 169.254.n.n subnet for the bridge by default. All I had to do (after much head scraching X-) ! ) was set the Network Bridge's TCP/IP properties to a network address in the same subnet as the rest of my equipment. (Rt click Network Bridge, select properties, select "Internet Protocol (TCP/IP)" and click properties, then select the "Use the following IP address" button and enter an available IP address in your subnet along with the proper subnet mask and default gateway.)
I hope this helps someone else!