On 2/3/10 7:11 PM, Dave Donovan wrote:
1) Set the interface to DHCP, obtain an IP and then tell your ISP's
equipment that it's static (or reserved, or whatever they're doing).
2) Change the IP of your WAN interface.  Move it up by 10 or
something.  As longs as you've only got a few interfaces in your
router, you're unlikely to overlap anything doing it that way.
3) Disable then enable the WAN interface so that it requests a new DHCP lease
4) Since you have a new MAC address, they'll give you a new IP address
at which point, you can go into their equipment and flag it as static.
5) Rinse and repeat:  You can repeat this process several times until
you have leased and then reserved the IPs that you need.
6) Setup all your new IPs as Virtual IPs under Firewall ->  Virtual IPs


How does a 'new' MAC come into play here though? Where does the new MAC
come from?

thanks...




--
J.D. Bronson
Information Technology
Aurora Health Care - Milwaukee WI
Office: 414.978.8282 // Fax: 414.978.3988

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