
-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- Hash: SHA1 El 2021-09-12 a las 23:46 +0200, Carlos E. R. escribió:
El 2021-09-12 a las 17:32 -0400, Douglas McGarrett escribió:
On 9/12/21 4:58 PM, Carlos E. R. wrote:
...
It is IMPOSSIBLE to access a printer on 192.168.1.26 when the network is 192.168.0.*
No matter how difficult it is, you have to tell that printer, using its panel, to use a different address in the 192.168.0.* range.
The alternative is to configure the new router to change to 192.168.1.1, and then configure anything else on that network to change back to 192.168.1.*
Your choice of difficulty.
I would change the printer.
You can give the printer a fixed IP on the printer panel, or also in the panel set it up to use an automatic address. Once done this, you have to enter the router configuration to ASSIGN a fixated address to the printer.
And please forget the wireshark path, that's very difficult for you and not needed.
Another possibility is to reconfigure every computer in your network to use a /16 mask instead of a /24 mask. I can not assure you that your printer will work with this without changing it, and anyway, it will also be difficult for you. - -- Cheers Carlos E. R. (from openSUSE 15.2 (Legolas)) -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- iHoEARECADoWIQQZEb51mJKK1KpcU/W1MxgcbY1H1QUCYT5+vxwccm9iaW4ubGlz dGFzQHRlbGVmb25pY2EubmV0AAoJELUzGBxtjUfVauYAn1d03uTw3wzacD/Q+svt wOXuZ9ybAJ9nzAdDyGi9KJINcuPJyVVu1ekSCA== =X48v -----END PGP SIGNATURE-----