raleighthings
Occasional Visitor
I have an old aging Netopia 9100 that I need to retire for various reasons. Plus We want to have dual WAN access.
What we have/want.
Cable 2/2mpbs and DSL 3/.384mbps down/up speeds.
Mail and FTP servers plus a few other inbound initiated items like remote control on the cable link . Everything else (mainly surfing) on the DSL link.
Both cable and DSL have a /28 block of static IPs. Cable we get to see 13 of them. With DSL we get the full 16 plus one more for the router.
Mail and FTP servers are setup using WAN IP addresses. Say 209.209.209.209. Rest of assignments are of the 192.168.99.x NAT variety. Plus the servers also have 192.168.99.x IP addresses.
As best I can tell the FVS336G will let me do all of the above without mapping the external WAN addresses to internal 192... NAT addresses. (Doing NAT mapping causes some headaches for some of the software we use.)
I'd also be able to manually switch the servers to the DSL WAN via a configuration change if needed. Or the NAT to the cable WAN if needed.
And I could without a huge expense have a 2nd one sitting around for when lightning blows out the "live" one.
Anyone see a reason this would not work with this router? I've already figured out that most routers with a dedicated DMZ will let me do this but only if I put the servers only on the DMZ port or add a 2nd NIC to the servers so they can exist on the DMZ and the non DMZ LAN. With this unit it appears all could exist on the same LAN.
Thanks
What we have/want.
Cable 2/2mpbs and DSL 3/.384mbps down/up speeds.
Mail and FTP servers plus a few other inbound initiated items like remote control on the cable link . Everything else (mainly surfing) on the DSL link.
Both cable and DSL have a /28 block of static IPs. Cable we get to see 13 of them. With DSL we get the full 16 plus one more for the router.
Mail and FTP servers are setup using WAN IP addresses. Say 209.209.209.209. Rest of assignments are of the 192.168.99.x NAT variety. Plus the servers also have 192.168.99.x IP addresses.
As best I can tell the FVS336G will let me do all of the above without mapping the external WAN addresses to internal 192... NAT addresses. (Doing NAT mapping causes some headaches for some of the software we use.)
I'd also be able to manually switch the servers to the DSL WAN via a configuration change if needed. Or the NAT to the cable WAN if needed.
And I could without a huge expense have a 2nd one sitting around for when lightning blows out the "live" one.
Anyone see a reason this would not work with this router? I've already figured out that most routers with a dedicated DMZ will let me do this but only if I put the servers only on the DMZ port or add a 2nd NIC to the servers so they can exist on the DMZ and the non DMZ LAN. With this unit it appears all could exist on the same LAN.
Thanks
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