What are you trying to accomplish with the two routers? Sounds like an
attempt at isolating the wifi network for security purposes.
In your configuration (assuming default router setups), devices on the
.1 network should be able to contact those on the .0 network with no
problem. But those on the .0 network will be blocked from contacting
anything on the .1 network. Devices on the .0 network would be
considered "outside" by the Linksys router, and treated as though they
were on the Internet and potentially hostile.
If the Linksys permits it, you could perhaps open up a hole in the
router's firewall permitting all traffic to/from the IP address of the
SB3 on .0 network. That will allow the SB3 to 'see' the internal
network, but I doubt that Squeezebox/Server discovery will work across
the subnets. Most likely, you'd have to configure the server address
manually on the SB3.
If you're not trying some kind of funky security thing with the two
routers, then you could just eliminate the Linksys and place everything
on the D-Link. If you really must used two devices for logistical
reasons, then the thing you might do is place the D-Link behind the
Linksys and truly configure the D-Link as a wireless access point,
where it and its wifi devices are on the same subnet as devices
connected to the Linksys.
Code:
--------------------
cable_modem
|-- Linksys
|-- D-Link
|~~ SB3
|-- SB3
|-- Computer
--------------------
--
JJZolx
Jim
------------------------------------------------------------------------
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View this thread: http://forums.slimdevices.com/showthread.php?t=78172
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