[mythtv-users] What to check/change when changing LAN subnet

Hika van den Hoven hikavdh at gmail.com
Tue May 13 17:48:20 UTC 2014


Hoi Mike,

Tuesday, May 13, 2014, 11:23:19 AM, you wrote:

> On 13/05/14 08:06, Simon Hobson wrote:
>> Craig Huff <huffcslists at gmail.com> wrote:
>>
>>> True, but when I get a new firewall/router, especially in a hurry because
>>> the old one died unexpectedly, things get hectic and with me, that usually
>>> means problems.  The last time I replaced the router, I ended up with one
>>> that didn't support DHCP/DNS (no openWRT) and had to scramble to get things
>>> reset because it defaulted to the 192.168.1.X subnet.  If I'm already using
>>> the standard 192.169.1.X subnet, switching routers is less involved. I'd
>>> rather be watching TV. ;-)
>>
>> Speaking as someone contemplating the move the other way round, ie away from
>> 192.168.0 which was the default for the first router I had, how about a bit
>> of forward thinking. If your router is that unreliable, then get another
>> cheap one now and configure it. Or, use one ofyour Linux machines as a router
>> and get all the benefits of that - add Shorewall as an easy to use firewall
>> "appliance" and you'll wonder how you ever managed with some crappy and
>> limited CPE router !
>>
>> OK, my network isn't the typical home network, but I have a guest VM (under
>> Xen) that just runs a router. At work I have to deal with customers' routers
>> - and I usually end up muttering about how crap the diagnostics and logging
>> on them is - some worse than others, but none of them good !
>>
> I went the other way. I have a mini-ITX board which does little but supply DHCP
> for all my networks. It takes almost no power and just sits there for years on
> end doing its job. The advantage is that if I have firewall/router problems the
> myth systems just keep going.

> The box is deliberately independent so that I can take anything else offline and
> rebuild/upgrade/fix it without disturbing other functions. You can't do that
> with a guest VM if you're upgrading the box where it and everything else lives.

> This box also has two other functions: it acts as a remote log collector, which
> means that the logs of /all/ my systems are in one place when I need to look at
> them and there's also a software cache for those 'apt-get update; apt-get
> upgrade' times. Pull once; re-use many times.

> Oh, and none of my subnets are 192.168.1.n; since everything I have is
> DHCP-enabled just plugging any laptop or workstation into a new or upgraded
> router gets me the login page. Reconfigure it, reboot, and I'm back in business.

Everybody has old computers. For a firewall/router a pentium2 with
256Mb memory and an old 20 Gb HD is already overkill. I myself use a
German distribution fl4l, which came from the isdn time. Theoretically
it runs of a floppy, but you can also start it of cd, since it runs al
in memory. It also has a openvpn server and other gadgets. Only the
english manual is not as good as the german.
You should also be aware that all modern hardware routers you get from
your profider have a backdoor, so they can upgrade it. But who knows how
secure they are with their passwords!

Tot mails,
  Hika                            mailto:hikavdh at gmail.com

"Zonder hoop kun je niet leven
Zonder leven is er geen hoop
Het eeuwige dilemma
Zeker als je hoop moet vernietigen om te kunnen overleven!"

De lerende Mens



More information about the mythtv-users mailing list