- Broadband works :-) but windows printer and file sharing doesn't :-(
- Posted by No_spam_please on December 15th, 2003
I have just changed to broadband and my main machine quite happily
sees the internet. I say my main machine as I have two laptops which I
use on a local network to share the printers and files and CDs on the
desktop machine. My previous system used a local hub with one port
connected to linux firewall and from there to a modem. This all
worked.
I have now replaced the local hub, linux firewall and modem with an
ADSL router modem and appear to have lost the ability to share
directories, drives or printers. The router modem I have is a borrowed
generic no name device (the box just says 'mentor ADSL router' on it)
which I was using to test everything before getting (probably) a DLINK
504, but I don't want to spend any money on that without understanding
the problem in case it will just display the same problem.
i.e.
This worked
+-- laptop (linux)
|
+-- laptop (98)
|
Modem -- Linux -- Hub --+-- desktop (xp) -- printer / CDR
|
+-- desktop (linux)
with the laptops seeing the printer and CD and and the desktop seeing
the internet.
This doesn't work
+-- laptop (linux)
|
+-- laptop (98)
|
ADSL router --+-- desktop (xp)-- printer / CDR
|
+-- desktop (linux)
The desktop can now see the internet much more effectvely but windows
no longer shares the printer or CD.
The best hyopthesis I have at the moment is that the router is
blocking all NetBeui traffic on the LAN rather than blocking NetBeui
from going across the firewall. But that is only a hypothesis as I'm
running out of my skill set at this point.
Everything on the LAN can ping everything else. Everything on the LAN
is assigned a static IP and uses the router as its gateway. No
configuration was change on any of the client machines as the router
was assigned the same IP as the previous linux firewall.
In case the router was blocking something I have tried putting the hub
between the router and LAN but that does not change anything. It is
almost as though all traffic is being sent via the gateway even if
bound for the local subnet and the router is then blocking it.
Any suggestions on what I should be looking at to make windows share
it's printers?
TIA
- Posted by Andy Ashworth on December 15th, 2003
No_spam_please wrote:
Try forcing your windows network setting to have "NETBIOS enabled over
TCP/IP".
Good luck
--
Andy
- Posted by No_spam_please on December 15th, 2003
On Mon, 15 Dec 2003 10:45:28 -0000, "Andy Ashworth"
<andyashworth@aegisengineering.co.uk> wrote:
Doesn't that just potentially allow all the windows boxes to be
attached from the internet? As this worked when linux handled the
routing surely it should be a router configuration problem (even if
that means that I need a router with a specific feature to allow this)
- Posted by No_spam_please on December 15th, 2003
On Mon, 15 Dec 2003 10:45:28 -0000, "Andy Ashworth"
<andyashworth@aegisengineering.co.uk> wrote:
Doesn't that make the windows boxes more prone to attack from the
internet? As this worked when linux handled the routing it seems that
the solution should be in the router configuration (even if that means
getting a router with a specific feature) rather than making the
windows boxes even more vulnerable.
- Posted by Andy Ashworth on December 15th, 2003
No_spam_please wrote:
That depends on how your router is set up - my own set-up is using an EN5861
router/ADSL modem which supports NAT and also has a packet filtering
firewall. Before I added the router I relied on the default settings which
has NETBIOS based on DHCP policy, i.e. it may or may not have been set. If
your router is being used as a DHCP server for your local network, then you
may find that the setting is different from your previous configuration.
Good luck!
--
Andy
- Posted by Peter Morgan - 0870 432 9631 on December 15th, 2003
On 15 Dec 2003 14:03 GMT, (No_spam_please) wrote:
Assuming your LAN IP addresses are "local" (eg 10.0.0.x) and your
router is using NAT, then the rest of the internet isn't seeing
any of your local PCs unless they request particular services,
such as using FTP, mail, or seeking web pages, and when the PCs
make a request for something the router will request, and pass any
data back to your PC. Port forwarding (which allows you to define
how external requests can reach local PCs) does expose the PCs to
a chance of attack, but in general a router "hides" your PCs if
used with NAT (use Google for a detailed explanation of Network
Address Translation). Try the "Shields Up!" test on www.grc.com
(OK, it may not be the best site, some consider the owner in a
bad light, but the Shields Up! test is a quick and dirty (free)
check you can use to see if your PCs are "exposed"). Peter M.
- Posted by Graham on December 15th, 2003
On Mon, 15 Dec 2003 10:35:51 +0000, wrote:
My guess is that you have DHCP enabled on the router. This is no problem
if it is set up correctly and no other DHCP server is running on your
network, both Linux and WinXP can act as a DHCP server. The router plays no
part in your local file sharing, it should just ignore it. If you really
want to check this, simply unplug the router from the hub. Can you share
files now?
Hope this helps, Graham
- Posted by news@jbrand_dot_clara_dot_co_dot_uk on December 16th, 2003
Graham wrote:
DHCP has been disabled on the router with so few machines it is viable
to give everything a static IP. I have tried putting the hub back
in but printer and file sharing is still disabled. If I remove the
router from the hub and then reboot the PCs printer and file sharing is
available again. So it is definitely a problem in the router but I am
stumped for the moment as to what that problem is and so what to look
for in a router to overcome the problem.
- Posted by Graham on December 17th, 2003
On Tue, 16 Dec 2003 20:27:12 +0000, new wrote:
A few further thoughts.
Can you ping between the PC's when the router is in place?
IP address scheme not configured correctly.
Is the router's ethernet hub faulty?
Try using your existing hub with the router plugged into one of the spare
ports using a crossover cable/crossover port.
Was the removed linux box providing DNS or browsmaster services for your
network that has now been removed?
Configure one of the other machines to take over the missing service(s).
Graham.
- Posted by Mike Guess on December 17th, 2003
In message <3fdd8e05.4426514@news.clara.net>, ?@?.?.invalid writes
Hi,
Don't know if this is the same problem, I have four PCs connected to a
router and was having problems seeing other PCs and sharing the printer.
The reason turned out to be the software firewall on one PC if it was
the first to boot up on the network. I was stopping all requests to that
machine from anywhere ( firewall settings ) and as it was the dominant
machine it was stopping all the others from seeing each other.
Mike
--
Mike Guess
- Posted by Bat Guano on December 17th, 2003
news@jbrand_dot_clara_dot_co_dot_uk wrote:
What's the lan address and netmask of the router? How about the PCs? Are
they in the same subnet?
- Posted by No_spam_please on December 18th, 2003
On Wed, 17 Dec 2003 20:51:09 +0000, Bat Guano <bat.guano@talk21dotcom>
wrote:
Router on LAN side is 192.168.3.1/255.255.255.0
All client machines are 192.168.3.x/255.255.255.0
All machines on the LAN can ping one another so it is not a subnet /
ip problem. Similarly none of the client machines had any IP or
netmask configs changed. The only change made to the networking was to
give the router the IP that was previously used by the LAN side of the
linux box.
At the moment the only to make windows sharing work is to keep the old
linux box in the system and running at all times. Which works and adds
an extra layer of security but shouldn't be required and is just one
more machine taking power and making noise.
- Posted by No_spam_please on December 18th, 2003
On Wed, 17 Dec 2003 19:26:11 +0000, Mike Guess
<mike@marton.demon.co.uk> wrote:
No firewall configurations were changed before changing to the new
router and replacing the router with the old hub allows it to work so
the local machines firewalls are OK.
- Posted by No_spam_please on December 19th, 2003
On Thu, 18 Dec 2003 09:58:28 GMT, (No_spam_please) wrote:
After much investigation (and the significant other wanting to know if
I was ever going to give up :-) ) I have a solution. The windows
machines have Computer Associates EZFireWall installed. For whatever
reason when the router is connected that firewall believes that all
network traffic is from the internet and so blocked the relevant
calls. Explicitly telling the firewalls that 192.168.3.2 -
192.168.3.255 is on the LAN and trusted enabled the printer sharing
again.
Which resolves the problem but doesn't explain why this wouldn't have
happened without the router in the network!
Thanks to everyone who suggested solutions.
- Posted by No_spam_please on December 19th, 2003
On Thu, 18 Dec 2003 09:58:28 GMT, (No_spam_please) wrote:
After much investigation (and the significant other wanting to know if
I was ever going to give up :-) ) I have a solution. The windows
machines have Computer Associates EZFireWall installed. For whatever
reason when the router is connected that firewall believes that all
network traffic is from the internet and so blocked the relevant
calls. Explicitly telling the firewalls that 192.168.3.2 -
192.168.3.255 is on the LAN and trusted enabled the printer sharing
again.
Which resolves the problem but doesn't explain why this wouldn't have
happened without the router in the network!
Thanks to everyone who suggested solutions.