lamplighter
Senior member
I have a home network with 3 computers and 3 IPs from @Home assigned dynamically. Each computer has 1 NIC card, and each goes to my 3Com OfficeConnect 8-port Switch. Two computers are Win2k and the third is Linux.
The 2 Win2k computers are already sharing files fine and stuff using NetBEUI. The problem comes in with the Linux one (I know this isn't a Linux place, but I am trying to keep the question about the networking aspect here =). I simply want to be able to transfer through FTP from Win2k to Linux, and for it to take the direct route (Win2k -> switch -> Linux). However, it goes through the net (Win2k -> switch -> cable modem -> switch -> Linux), meaning it goes at 25 k/s. I think it must be because of the subnets. The 2 Win2k IPs are 24.xx.140.xx while the Linux IP is 24.xx.97.xx. I tried FTPing from Win2k to Win2k and it transferred at instead of 500 k/s, like it should, and a tracert seemed to verify these findings.
Does this make sense, that the reason the switch does not recognize the direct path is the subnet? After I get that verified, does anyone know if there is any way to make the switch recognize that 97 as the same subnet as 140, or force it to take the direct path? Or is assigning internal IPs the only other option?
Thanks for any help.
The 2 Win2k computers are already sharing files fine and stuff using NetBEUI. The problem comes in with the Linux one (I know this isn't a Linux place, but I am trying to keep the question about the networking aspect here =). I simply want to be able to transfer through FTP from Win2k to Linux, and for it to take the direct route (Win2k -> switch -> Linux). However, it goes through the net (Win2k -> switch -> cable modem -> switch -> Linux), meaning it goes at 25 k/s. I think it must be because of the subnets. The 2 Win2k IPs are 24.xx.140.xx while the Linux IP is 24.xx.97.xx. I tried FTPing from Win2k to Win2k and it transferred at instead of 500 k/s, like it should, and a tracert seemed to verify these findings.
Does this make sense, that the reason the switch does not recognize the direct path is the subnet? After I get that verified, does anyone know if there is any way to make the switch recognize that 97 as the same subnet as 140, or force it to take the direct path? Or is assigning internal IPs the only other option?
Thanks for any help.