Dale Sparrow
New Around Here
I have a particular requirement which I feel should be straightforward but seems to require some black magic.
I have two routers. Router A is in the house and is connected to the internet and router B is in my room which I plug a WAN cable from A into for internet. I disable DHCP on B and tell it to bridge the internet connection through ethernet. If I dont disable DHCP it causes havoc with other devices in the house. Unfortunately this means my devices get assigned IPs that are on A's subnet since it is now the DHCP server. The kicker is I am developing IoT applications that require me to take Router B with me to a location without internet and all the devices I had in my room should still connect to each other over it.
I want Router B to supply internet and local IP's to all devices connected to it, but leave devices connected to Router A alone. Why can't I have two subnets configured like this? Or am I just missing a setting?
Any help would greatly be appreciated.
Kind Regards
Dale
I have two routers. Router A is in the house and is connected to the internet and router B is in my room which I plug a WAN cable from A into for internet. I disable DHCP on B and tell it to bridge the internet connection through ethernet. If I dont disable DHCP it causes havoc with other devices in the house. Unfortunately this means my devices get assigned IPs that are on A's subnet since it is now the DHCP server. The kicker is I am developing IoT applications that require me to take Router B with me to a location without internet and all the devices I had in my room should still connect to each other over it.
I want Router B to supply internet and local IP's to all devices connected to it, but leave devices connected to Router A alone. Why can't I have two subnets configured like this? Or am I just missing a setting?
Any help would greatly be appreciated.
Kind Regards
Dale