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Forum Discussion
PaulSkil
Nov 02, 2015Aspirant
EX6200 Acting as a DNS server
Purchased a EX6200, upgraded to latest firmware. Connected to a business network and configured as an access point. Issue I am having is that two PC's on the business network which is on a 160.0.1.x ...
TheEther
Nov 04, 2015Guru
I don't think see the chicken and egg situation. When you first set it up, it should have connected to the existing network and created two new Wi-Fi SSIDs by concatenating _2GEXT and _5GEXT to the existing SSID. At this point, there's no way any other PC would have connected to the EX6200 since the new SSIDs were different. When the EX6200 connected to the router, it should have picked up a new IP address in the 160.0.1.X subnet as well as the proper DNS server address, 160.0.1.7. You could have confirmed this by connecting a PC to the EX6200 and checked the DNS server address. It it was still wrong, you could have changed it in the EX6200 settings.
From that point onwards, any PC that connected to the new SSIDs should have picked up the correct DNS server.
Anyway, if you haven't already sent the unit back, give it another try.
PaulSkil
Nov 06, 2015Aspirant
Quote "When you first set it up, it should have connected to the existing network and created two new Wi-Fi SSIDs by concatenating _2GEXT and _5GEXT to the existing SSID."
I am setting it up as a Access point not as an extender.
- TheEtherNov 06, 2015Guru
I think you are implying that during initial setup you changed the Wi-Fi SSIDs to be broadcast by the EX6200 to match the SSIDs broadcast by the main router. But the EX6200 should have already been connected to the main router and DHCP'd for its own IP address and picked up the correct DNS server. The step to set up the EX6200's own SSIDs comes after this, so I don't see the window where PCs can connect via Wi-Fi and get the wrong DNS server address.
Are you connecting PCs to the EX6200 via Ethernet before initial setup? You shouldn't do that.
Or are you connecting the EX6200 into the main network via Ethernet? That's not supported by the EX6200. See page 115 in the manual.
- PaulSkilNov 06, 2015Aspirant
No not implying anything I am clearly stating I am setting the unit up as an Access point. P115 of user manual
I assume you mean question 1. This is out of date. The unit when initialy shipped could only be setup in this way. However - the lastest firmware allows you to set the unit up as an extender or an access point. It is the first question the configurator asks.
Please bear in mind I have setup dozens of AP's over the years. Its quite simple at no point in any way or configuration should the unit be acting/advertising it is a DNS server. It did, this caused the problems stated. Units gone back.
- TheEtherNov 06, 2015Guru
Oh, I did not know that they added Access Point functionality to the EX6200. That's great. Are you allowed to use any Ethernet port to connect to the router?
It was probably acting as a DNS relay/proxy. Even Netgear routers act as DNS relays. In any case, the extender should not have advertised itself as a DNS relay without knowing the address of the actual DNS server. That should be considered a bug which Netgear should look into. Hopefully, a moderator will take notice of this and have engineering investigate.