On 01/11/2015 11:50 AM, Carl Hartung wrote:
I can sign into the router's web-based management portal but not browse the Internet.
I presume from that you mean you cannot access the internet at large by any means, ping, traceroute, telnet, ssh, netcat, nmap - nothing! - from absolutely *ANY* device on your LAN, that is on the nearside of your router. "Browse" I would take to mean access, using first DNS resolution to get the IP address, using a "browser" such as Firefox. That's why an earlier post about the difference between trying to access a site by its name vs its IP address google-public-dns-a.google.com vs 8.8.8.8 for example is important. If all you can do is access the web based management port, if all those other protocol won't "let you out", then you do not have a problem with openSuse 13.2, you have a problem with your router. If that is the case, then really its an issue you have to resolve with your ISP. I rent my router from my cable provider and if anything goes wrong its their responsibility to fix it, and that includes replacing a failed router. You might start by power cycling the router; turn it of for long enough that any capacitors in the power circuits discharge, at least 30 seconds. Accessing the management port you should be able to see what kind of connection you have with your ISP, what your DNS settings there are, and of course what your local LAN is configured as, both its IP subnet and if local DHCP is uprating and what addresses it has assigned. Although I have my desktop and server using static addresses outside the router's DHCP block, all my wifi devices (and yes that include guests and visitors) make use of DHCP. -- /"\ \ / ASCII Ribbon Campaign X Against HTML Mail / \ -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse+unsubscribe@opensuse.org To contact the owner, e-mail: opensuse+owner@opensuse.org