Well, I have a question, you know ipv6 uses %16or eth0 to mark different NIC(network interface card), my question is if I have a wireless card and a ethernet card in a computer and I connect both networks(wifi and a switch)and the switch is not connected to the wifi device, the wifi is connected to modem1, the switch is connect to modem2,
I think the Modem1 ip should not be equal to Modem2 ip. But will the Modems get the correct ip automatically when their default ips are clashed to each other?
I just figured out an answer to a problem in reality LAN and WAN setting. Actually, the problem is solved. When I talk about the problem I am considering and searching the answer by myself too...🤣🤣🤣
can I have the same gateway(Modem1 ip = Modem2 ip) ip address 192.168.1.1 for both the wifi and the switch? Confused. If in ipv6, %num can distinguish the interface device. I am confused because if I tap 192.168.1.1 in my browser to set my Modem, which Modem is?🤣🤣🤣Confused.
I am here.😁😁😁
Thanks
in ipv4, I am confused, maybe in ipv6 we can use the same ipv6%17 and the same ipv6%16 to distinguish the interface devices.
I never noticed this before.
Well, I have a question, you know ipv6 uses %16or eth0 to mark different NIC(network interface card), my question is if I have a wireless card and a ethernet card in a computer and I connect both networks(wifi and a switch)and the switch is not connected to the wifi device, the wifi is connected to modem1, the switch is connect to modem2,
Got it.
I think the Modem1 ip should not be equal to Modem2 ip. But will the Modems get the correct ip automatically when their default ips are clashed to each other?
Great guys. You work very hard.
I think the Modems will get the different ip automatically. Am I right?
Great you.
I just figured out an answer to a problem in reality LAN and WAN setting. Actually, the problem is solved. When I talk about the problem I am considering and searching the answer by myself too...🤣🤣🤣
Great. Problem solver.
can I have the same gateway(Modem1 ip = Modem2 ip) ip address 192.168.1.1 for both the wifi and the switch? Confused. If in ipv6, %num can distinguish the interface device. I am confused because if I tap 192.168.1.1 in my browser to set my Modem, which Modem is?🤣🤣🤣Confused.
Maybe modem is not correct term for your circumstance? It should be gateway?
If the Modem cannot get the ip automatically, then I need to manully set the ip for one of the Modems.😁😁😁
Of course, haha