- Two Routers?
- Posted by sala on July 14th, 2007
I have another newbie question... In my situation where I have
Modem
.... Router #1
.......PC #1a
.......PC #1b
.......PC #1c
.......Router #2 (?)
..........PC #2a
..........PC #2b
..........PC #2c
The PCs #1a/b/c are not regulated (employee own laptops)
and PCs #2a/b/c are regulated with company databases, etc.
I want PCs #2a/b/c to get to the modem and the internet.
I'm thinking that because PCs #1x are unregulated and
might have viruses, I might want to restrict them from
accessing PCs #2x. Is this possible with the second router?
Can the 2nd router be configured so PCs #1x can access PC #2c but
not the other two?
Thanks...
- Posted by Horst Franke on July 16th, 2007
In news:469860B2.50507@sala.com sala wrote:
Hi sala, I don't understand Your setup.
What type of modem (analog or DSL) and where installed?
What types of routers (do they don't have a modem integrated)?
This can not be said without knowledge about Your HW setup.
i.e. describe Your network in more details.
How do the employee PCs attach to the company network?
Are they restricted to only company but not private use?
How do they connect to the company network?
There are several ways to prevent one PC connecting another.
This has nothing to do with Routers (as far as I can see).
There should be only one router (incl. Modem) for I-Net connection.
The open question is, how are the employees PCs connected to the
company's network?
What was Your sense of using two routers (w/o integrated Modem)?
Horst
- Posted by sala on July 16th, 2007
There's an old, simple setup that I am redoing and expanding, but
here's a bit more detail on what I'm thinking...
Horst Franke wrote:
Router/Switch #1 will be new, probably Gigabit capable and won't need
integrated modem. I will probably have a separate 802.11b/g wireless
access point. May want to go with 802.11n in future. The need
for wireless is not too great right now.
Router/Switch #2 will be Gigabit capable since some of the systems
have Gigabit adapters
using wired or wireless. Most of PC #2x are desktops, but
some may want to connect their laptops on the #2 side
of the router/switch.
There are no restrictions (I assume you mean to the internet).
The system, in the near future have no server, but I want to have
the ability for the #2x PCs to share data.
I was just going to make Router/Switch #2 a Switch but I thought
one can restrict access into the #2 side by using a router. Is
this not correct? And if it is possible, can it be configured where
systems on #1 side can access specific #2 computers?
Currently there about 7 computers, but it may expand.
Thanks...
- Posted by Horst Franke on July 18th, 2007
In news:469BB2A8.4020902@sala.com sala wrote:
Ok, Sala, but WHERE is this modem connected too?
And how are the PC#1 connected to the PC#2?
What belongs to a LAN setup and what to a WLAN setup?
Not sure what You want. But access on LAN would need
specific LAN accesses: i.e. on PC#2 You will specify what other
users of PC#1 will have access via user/password.
Then You need to setup ICS (internet connecton share) and define
the other PCs that might use this interface.
But do not mix this up with LAN access to another PC.
This is a type of network setup (LAN) and access regulations.
If You don't want that any PC#1 can access any PC#2 data, then
don't allow such an access. And for specifics establish special logons.
This will need special users identified by password.
NO, this has nothing to do with router setup!
It only depends on network (LAN) setup.
But as I said before, without telling Your exact HW setup, there would
be only guessings.
Horst