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guthrie108's avatar
guthrie108
Aspirant
Feb 07, 2021

WNR2000 connected devices empty

Love the router - but although I have ~7 WiFi devices connected, the "connected Devices" list is empty.

I have it setup as a bridge - so that wiFi devices can see all other devices on the LAN (flat network). I am already below a firewall NAT router, and didn't want to get a segmented local network.

I want to resolve a local known MAC address to its IP

 

4 Replies

  • > WNR2000 [...]

     

    > Model: JWNR2000v3|N300 Wireless Router

     

       What's the actual model number?  Look for "Model" on the product
    label.  Firmware version?

     

    > I have it setup as a bridge [...]

     

       What, exactly, does that mean to you?  Wireless access point?

     

    > I want to resolve a local known MAC address to its IP

     

       Consult your (unspecified) "a firewall NAT router"?  I'd expect it to
    know everything about your "LAN (flat network)".

    • guthrie108's avatar
      guthrie108
      Aspirant

      Thanks for the reply - the firewall covers an entire internal network, and I do not have permission or access.

      The Netgear as noted is WNR2000V3 (and most current firmware - (V1.1.2.18).

      Yes, in this context Bridge=AP.

      So the point is why the Netgear does not have info on the WiFi connections it establishes.

      I can look in the Windows ARP table I suppose, but would expect the NetGear to also have that information.

      • antinode's avatar
        antinode
        Guru

        > So the point is why the Netgear does not have info on the WiFi
        > connections it establishes.

         

           In that mode, it really has little interaction with a client device,
        other than to pass data through to/from the main router.  That main
        router handles the DHCP and DNS functions; the WNR2000v3-as-WAP is
        generally transparent, so it doesn't need to collect these data for its
        own use.

         

           The fundamental mystery is how the WNR2000v3 collects the info which
        it uses to populate that report.  Whatever it does, it'd seem to be
        insufficient in that mode.  For a model of its age, I wouldn't hold my
        breath waiting for fresh firmware which would improve this behavior.

         

           Knowing nothing, I might try a few experiments, like, say, accessing
        the managment web site of the WNR2000v3-as-WAP, to see if that sort of
        direct interaction gets noticed.  To do that, you might need to know its
        LAN IP address.  Again, the main router should know that, but, without
        access to its brain, I'm not sure how I'd proceed.


        > I can look in the Windows ARP table I suppose, [...]

         

           You could try that, but I'm not confident that it'll help.

         

        > [...] but would expect the NetGear to also have that information.

         

           It probably could collect it, but its usual (as-router) scheme might
        not do the job.