A.x, you need to set the client router to an IP of 192.168. What this means is, if the primary router has an IP of 192.168. You don't need to worry about the primary router as long as you set your client LAN IP address to a different subnet. The Router you are configuring is the client router. The Router/AP that you are trying to connect to is the primary router. Further explanation of bridging modes is in the Glossary. To have computers connected to both routers (main and secondary) and co-exist in the same subnet, set up DD-WRT as a Client Bridge, Repeater Bridge or use WDS. The router in Client Mode must use its own DHCP server to give out IP numbers, Gateway and DNS server to the devices connected to its LAN ports. Thus, when port forwarding is needed it must be configured at both routers - not just on the main (host) router. The main router and secondary router (DD-WRT client mode) are on separate subnets. The AP is not required to be running DD-WRT firmware. It is not seen as an access point by laptops or other computers scanning for AP's and does not accept wireless connections from client devices. It uses its wireless connection as the WAN interface, and shares the internet connection only to the LAN ports. This mode is NOT for WIRED connections between two routers! It is a wireless connection between two routers only.Ī router in Client Mode connects to another wireless Access Point (the host router).
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