Re: wireless LAN in place of existing cabled one

From: Benedict Verheyen (linux4bene_at_pandora.be)
Date: 11/15/03

  • Next message: Arnt Karlsen: "Re: freelance sysadmining - other thread went bonkers"
    To: <debian-user@lists.debian.org>
    Date: Sat, 15 Nov 2003 00:24:13 +0100
    
    

    ----- Original Message -----
    From: "BruceG" <griffisb@bellsouth.net>
    To: <debian-user@lists.debian.org>
    Sent: Friday, November 14, 2003 1:06 PM
    Subject: Re: wireless LAN in place of existing cabled one

    > On Thursday 13 November 2003 20:15, Benedict Verheyen wrote:
    > > Op do 13-11-2003, om 02:12 schreef BruceG:
    > >
    > > <snip>
    > >
    > > > For the wireless bridge to work, it would need to connect to a WAP
    > > > (wireless access point). Since your Server is upstairs, you could
    do
    > > > something like this (assuming your cable or DSL is dropped off
    with an
    > > > Ethernet connection, not USB):
    > > >
    > > > DSL line in to providers DSL Router/modem (with an Ethernet port,
    not
    > > > USB!) ---> Ethernet port to a wireless router - Linksys BEFW11S4
    costs
    > > > $69.99 at Amazon.com. Check out the Broadband forums. Linksys
    forum is
    > > > here: http://www.dslreports.com/forum/equip,16
    > > > The router has 2 "connections". An Ethernet port to
    your DSL
    > > > modem
    > > > A wireless connection for your home LAN
    > > >
    > > >
    > > > V
    > > > Linksys WET11 upstairs. $84.88 at Amazon.com
    > > >
    > > > The WET11 bridge has an Ethernet port for your PC, or
    > > > connect it to a hub or switch to serve multiple PCs.
    > > >
    > > > A couple notes: The Wireless router can serve multiple wireless
    clients.
    > > > You can connect a couple wireless bridges to it, or a wireless
    bridge and
    > > > also support laptops with wireless cards. My WAP54G supports a
    bridge and
    > > > a cardbus card. The wireless stuff I support a church has 2 WET11
    bridges
    > > > connected, a total of 5 PCs bridged in. It can support additional
    > > > wireless clients.
    > > >
    > > > 802.11B is 10 MBPS. 802.11G can go to 54MBPS. You may be limited
    by
    > > > distance. I figure since my DSL connection is 256Meg or so - 10
    Meg is
    > > > okay on the LAN side, although it can get slow doing backups over
    > > > wireless.
    > > >
    > > > I'm sure D-Link can do the same using the a wireless router
    downstairs
    > > > and a wireless bridge upstairs.
    > >
    > > If i understand correctly, i could install a wireless router just
    behind
    > > the cable modem, plug in such a wireless bridge in eth0 of my
    server,
    > > and keep the rest of the network like it is namely: eth1 of the
    server
    > > connected to a hub and my pc ( pc1 ) also connected to the hub. This
    > > would provide internet access to both the server and pc1. Right?
    > > The eth0 would off course not receive a public ip anymore although
    that
    > > would be cool if it could be done.
    > > And this wouldn't require me to config anything in linux then?
    > >
    > > If i want to make sure that all future traffic (laptops or pc not in
    the
    > > same room as the hub) goes via the hub, could i plug in a wireless
    > > access point in the hub and redirect all traffic via that access
    point
    > > instead of directly through the router?
    > >
    > > Benedict
    >
    > The wireless router would get it's IP address and DNS servers from
    your ISP.
    > It would connect directly to your DSL modem using it's WAN port. The
    wireless
    > router would serve as a dhcp server for clients off it's LAN port.
    Your
    > server (and all PCs) would talk through the wireless router.
    >
    > If you want to continue using your server as a dhcp server, proxy
    server, ...
    > - you would use a wireless access point (a WAP). If you use a WAP,
    your
    > existing LAN would still communicate as it does now. All you would be
    doing
    > is replacing your LAN cable between floors with a wirless drop.
    >
    > Check out the broadband forums (do a google on broad band forums). The
    folks
    > on the forums can tell you exactly what you need and how it works. I
    can tell
    > you what I use and have configured and how that works - which may be
    slightly
    > different.
    >
    > By the way - I am using:
    > A Linksys BEFSX41 router (had this when I was going wired)
    > A Linksys WAP54G (for wireless clients, it "bridges"
    wireless
    > clients into the wired LAN)
    > A Linksys WET11 bridge (for wirelessly bridging in a small wired
    LAN
    > upstairs)
    > A Linksys 54G CadBus card (for my wife's laptop)
    >
    > You would skip the Linksys router part and continue using your server
    as the
    > router. That would mean you would need a WAP and a bridge (or a
    wireless card
    > that works in your server - the bridge is MUCH easier to set up and
    gives a
    > greater distance).
    >

    Cool, thanks for the info!

    Benedict

    -- 
    To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to debian-user-request@lists.debian.org 
    with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact listmaster@lists.debian.org
    

  • Next message: Arnt Karlsen: "Re: freelance sysadmining - other thread went bonkers"

    Relevant Pages

    • Re: Best Config for LAN
      ... You just give the server the same gateway as the other machines. ... XP wireless NIC at .0.2, ... Bridged the XP wireless and wired NIC's, ...
      (microsoft.public.windows.server.networking)
    • Re: Wired/Wireless Conflict
      ... Internet for LAN computers or the Server. ... We do have a wireless DSL ... router that we know works when we use a laptop... ...
      (alt.internet.wireless)
    • Re: Server/Network setup question
      ... I had hoped to be able to just add the server, ... The laptops on my network go wireless. ... The LAN side of your router is probably set up as 192.168.1.x now ...
      (microsoft.public.windows.server.sbs)
    • Re: Server/Network setup question
      ... The internal LAN address range, according to the diagram, ... server with a static address also in the 192.168.1.x range. ... my wireless connectivity will cease to work when I add the server ... For wireless for the LAN workstations, I would buy a Wireless Access Point ...
      (microsoft.public.windows.server.sbs)
    • Re: Wired/Wireless Conflict
      ... Internet for LAN computers or the Server. ... We do have a wireless DSL ... router that we know works when we use a laptop... ...
      (alt.internet.wireless)