- Apr 8, 2001
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My roommate and I each have our own network off our cable connection that offers multiple IPs. We have our reasons for doing this, and so far it works great, except if we ever want to exchange a file we have to use an external harddrive.
Is there a way to connect our two Linksys WRT54GS routers so the computers behind them can communicate across the two routers but when seeking the internet they have their own IP address?
Internet
||
|Router 1 (unique public IP)>computers can communicate with Router 2
Router 2 (unique public IP) >computers can communicate with Router 1
I was thinking of making the Routers have different IPs such as 192.168.1.1 and 192.168.2.1 but on the same subnet 255.255.255.0
But that doesn't make sense.
Confused and I can't find a simple article to explain this, as every article I find is people wanting to bridge wireless networks or the article starts talking about WINS.
Is there a way to connect our two Linksys WRT54GS routers so the computers behind them can communicate across the two routers but when seeking the internet they have their own IP address?
Internet
||
|Router 1 (unique public IP)>computers can communicate with Router 2
Router 2 (unique public IP) >computers can communicate with Router 1
I was thinking of making the Routers have different IPs such as 192.168.1.1 and 192.168.2.1 but on the same subnet 255.255.255.0
But that doesn't make sense.
Confused and I can't find a simple article to explain this, as every article I find is people wanting to bridge wireless networks or the article starts talking about WINS.
