View Single Post
  #5  
Old March 23rd 12, 10:32 AM posted to microsoft.public.windowsxp.general
VanguardLH[_2_]
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 10,881
Default The network path was not found.

Char Jackson wrote:

On Thu, 22 Mar 2012 22:43:56 -0500, VanguardLH wrote:

Char Jackson wrote:

Paul wrote:

Router could be blocking.

Not likely, and not applicable if both computers are connected to
router's LAN ports. The LAN ports are just a switch, not a router.


Not true. Some routers have the feature that the intranet hosts
connected to the router can get Internet access but not access to the
other intranet hosts. Just because your family is sharing Internet
access through a router doesn't mean you want your kid getting network
access to your at-home business computer.

If you don't have a strong password to your router that only you know
along with restricting physical access to the router so only you can
access then who knows what the kids have been doing to reset or
reconfigure it. Strong password to limit who can configure the router,
physical access restriction to limit who can reset the router.

While the input side of a router is a switch, many switches can control
inter-port connections. A router, if capable, can permit external-only
connects (from LAN port to WAN port) but block inter-host connects (from
LAN port to LAN port). I now have a low-end Linksys router that doesn't
have that feature but remember a prior D-Link router that did. That way
all my family's hosts would get Internet access but they couldn't get at
my host.


I haven't seen that feature applied to the wired ports on a NAT
router, although it's fairly common to see it applied between wireless
connections and wired connections, which wouldn't apply here.

Do you have a specific example of a common NAT router that has the
capability you described? I'd like to skim through its manual to learn
more about it.

Third party firmware, like dd-wrt, can accomplish it, but I wasn't
assuming the presence of third party firmware in the OP's case.


I no longer have the old and dead D-Link router. The first one burned
out after 2-1/2 years. Routers use convection cooling (no fan) and can
overheat the processor. It was getting flaky on whether the WAN-side
would work or not and it kept getting worse over 2 months until I got
another same model D-Link router which made the problem go away
immediately. That 2nd D-Link router lasted just over 2 years before the
same flakiness cropped up so I wasn't going to get another one.

One of its security settings was to block inter-port access to the
internal hosts. Your intranet hosts couldn't connect to each other. I
replaced with a Linksys router since those had lasted for many more
years at work. Alas, one of the features missing in the Linksys was the
option to block inter-LAN port routing.

It's been way too long since I had the D-Link routers. The Linksys has
been working for 6 years now. When I looked at D-Link's support page
(so I could go find a manual), none of the model numbers stuck out as
what I had before. However, I think you're experienced only with
unmanaged switches: you plop them on a shelf and connect the hosts and
there's no configuration for you do to do. It's a simple and unmanaged
switch. Managed switches lets you configure how that network device
will work. Well, since the frontend to a router is a switch then why
can't a router have a managed switch?

From what I recall, the switch (or the one in the router) might support
VLANs (virtual LANs) that allows partitioning a physical network into
multiple logical groups. Devices could belong to one, or more, groups.
That was how you choose which devices could talk to each other. Devices
in one group could not talk directly to devices in another group. The
VLANs were logical groups but treated as separate LANs. You could have
an alpha lab and dev group with their workstations going through the
same switch to access the corporate backbone but you could isolate the
lab and dev hosts so they couldn't talk to each other. It allows a
single switch to provide isolation and security for multiple subscribers
using the same switch.

Once you get out of the sub-$100 consumer routers, they probably have
more configuration options, like security options to isolate the hosts
on the LAN-side ports (to the frontend switch). For example, the Cisco
861 router supports VLANs (newegg's price $274).
Ads