May I suggest using the config wizard and pick one of the few scenarios
available?

If that does not cut it, you will need to learn how to configure the
router from the command line. There are few things at play with these
enterprise like routers: routing, switching, NAT and DHCP, DNS and
stateful firewall. For that reason, the setup needs patience, proper
planning and configuring all the pieces to work in concert.

The best way is to start with network diagram routing, forwarding, NAT
and firewall rules. You can configure DHCP at the end with DNS for each
LAN subnet.

There are plenty of pretty nice tutorials written for ERL and ERP.
Ubiquity also has some guides and examples. I would stray away from
forums as people tend to repeat things out of context without properly
understanding the subject.

If you need simple gui type setup, this might not be the best router to
use out of the box. In that case, I would suggest installing LEDE/oWRT
on it. Lede lists it as fully supported.

Best luck, Tomas


On Sun, 2017-11-05 at 15:04 -0800, Rich Shepard wrote:
> On Sun, 5 Nov 2017, Daniel Bolduc wrote:
> 
> > 
> > So you're able to communicate with the router and configure it when
> > connected to its WAN port, but not the LAN port?
> > 
> > Try enabling DHCP on the router and see if your computer receives
> > an IP
> > address from it.
> 
> Dan,
> 
>    Supposedly it should work with either DHCP or a static IP address.
> I can
> reconfigure the laptop and get back to the router and change the LAN
> ports.
> 
> Thanks,
> 
> Rich
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