May-31st-2022, 03:21 PM
(This post was last modified: May-31st-2022, 05:08 PM by Armin@netPI.)
Well Steph,
I don't know if it is possible with netPI since it does not support port forwarding. But as I said before I am no networking expert.
I analysed your PDF. Supposing you connect you Wifi tablet to the netPI Wifi access point ... then it would get an IP address in the range from 17.100.4.80 to 89.
In the most simpliest case it would get the first ip address 17.100.8.80 through netPI's Wifi DHCP server, right? Also your Wifi tablet should automatically receive a gateway address through the same netPI Wifi DHCP server. Which one is it? Is it 17.100.8.16 which is the Wifi IP address of netPI? The gateway address in your tablet is the first most relevant value to know to let the routing table in your tablet know where to send a ping to e.g. 192.168.1.100 to. Cause any IP address that is not in any known subnet will be sent to the default gateway which must be the netPI IP address. Else not even the ping ethernet frame is leaving your tablet at all.
Thx
Armin
I don't know if it is possible with netPI since it does not support port forwarding. But as I said before I am no networking expert.
I analysed your PDF. Supposing you connect you Wifi tablet to the netPI Wifi access point ... then it would get an IP address in the range from 17.100.4.80 to 89.
In the most simpliest case it would get the first ip address 17.100.8.80 through netPI's Wifi DHCP server, right? Also your Wifi tablet should automatically receive a gateway address through the same netPI Wifi DHCP server. Which one is it? Is it 17.100.8.16 which is the Wifi IP address of netPI? The gateway address in your tablet is the first most relevant value to know to let the routing table in your tablet know where to send a ping to e.g. 192.168.1.100 to. Cause any IP address that is not in any known subnet will be sent to the default gateway which must be the netPI IP address. Else not even the ping ethernet frame is leaving your tablet at all.
Thx
Armin
„You never fail until you stop trying.“, Albert Einstein (1879 - 1955)