NETGEAR is aware of a growing number of phone and online scams. To learn how to stay safe click here.
Forum Discussion
jweegar
May 29, 2025Aspirant
Saving Attached Device Edits
Are attached device table edits saved into the router’s backup .cfg file? If so, are these edits restored upon a .cfg restore operation? Is there anyway to transfer/copy/send attached device ...
jweegar
May 30, 2025Aspirant
Yes, I'm talking about multiple routers on the same home network (192.168.1.0) (255.255.255.0). One router is actually used as a router providing DHCP, address reservations and internet access. And the other routers used as Access Points both inside and outside the home, with ethernet run to each.
See, when a device connects to a router, about the only consistently correct data the device provides to the router is the device's MAC address. Other data, like device type, device manufacture model name and device name are rarely correct. Consequently, in a larger network with >100 connected devices, the attached devices table is real mess. And it takes quite a bit of work to track down the actual, correct information for each connected device and update the attached devices table. So once the attached devices table looks good, it would be great to preserve it somehow: serialize the data to a file, pass the data to another router on the network (as a backup), just in case something bad (power surge) takes out the main router. The idea is to more easily switch over to another router (already on the network configured as an AP) and reconfigure that router from an AP back to a router. Maybe what I'm looking for is more of a "business/commercial" router rather than a "home/consumer" router? Or maybe the best that can be done with current technology is to simply screen-shot the multiple pages of the attached devices table and save them into a Word file? Thanks again.
FURRYe38
May 30, 2025Guru - Experienced User
For AP mode would not really matter, still connected table is transitory and all depends on where devices get connected at that time. Changes when devices come and go.
But you can give it a try and see how it does for you.
If these home class routers are being used in a business then ya, you'll not see same features as what maybe in business class systems. If for home then, it is what it is and what you see is what you get.