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Forum Discussion
Bianca555
Oct 14, 2017Aspirant
From RAIdar - setup, I get nothing (page not available)
I've moved to a new house and took my old ReadyNas with me. I've plugged it into the router (restarted router afterwards). When I start RAIdar, it finds my NAS immediatly (all green lights). But wh...
- Oct 17, 2017
You are trying to configure the NAS as a DHCP server but you need to configure it as a DHCP client.
Disable the service on the page you are on (clearing the checkbox and click apply). Then go to the Network->Interfaces menu, and select "Use values from a DHCP server" in the IPv4 assignment field.
Bianca555
Oct 15, 2017Aspirant
You're right, the sub-net is different.
If there is a solution where I can keep the sub-net of my network and change the sub-net of my NAS, i would prefer that solution.
I already gone to a lot of trouble connecting 2 routers, so now that this is finally working out, I really don't want to make any changes to that :)
Thanks!
Sandshark
Oct 15, 2017Sensei
If you have two routers -- one connected to the other, then that's your problem. Each is giving out IP addresses in a different range, and I assume you computer is on one and the NAS on the other. Is there a reason you are using two routers, like better wifi coverage? If so, you need to set the second one up as an access point, not a router (which not all routers can do). You could also move either the computer or the NAS so they are both plugged into the same router. You'd still have a double NAT issue, but it doesn't really hurt if all the devices just need internet access, not to talk to each other.
If the reason your NAS is on another sub-net is because you previously set it up as a static IP with a different network configuration, then you can connect your computer diirectly to it, set the computer IP to a static one in the same sub-net, and then go in and reset the NAS to use DHCP. You should then reserve an address for the NAS in your router, not set it to a static IP, so this does not happen when you again make network changes.
Doing an OS reinstall (be careful not to do a factory default, that deletes all data) will also set the NAS to use DHCP and reset the admin password to the default.
- Bianca555Oct 16, 2017Aspirant
I'm sure that the 2 routers is not the issue. That's what I meant with that I've gone to a lot of trouble setting that one up :)
The issue I have was already there when I only had 1 router installed. And now, with my 2 routers, RAIdar sees my NAS both when I connect my laptop to my 2nd router and when I connect it to my 1st router. So now I'm sure that I only have 1 network where all my appliances are visible.
So it must be the subnet thing you already mentioned. Currently I'm not in my new house, so I'm not able to try your solution. But I think (and hope) I must be able to solve it with the description you gave. I will let you know what the result is (or when I have additional questions) in a few days. Thanks so far for your help!
- SandsharkOct 16, 2017Sensei
There are only two ways to get two sub-nets I know of. One is to have two routers giving out DHCP addresses in two nets (which you say you don't have and your experiments seem to verify) and the other is that you previously set the NAS up with a static IP and then moved it to another subnet than the one it is configured for (which you often get with a new router configuration). So, it sounds like the options of resetting the NAS back to DHCP addresing are your options unless you want to change the routers to be back to giving out addresses in the same sub-net as the one the NAS is set to (which you indicated was not your preference).
- StephenBOct 16, 2017Guru - Experienced User
I agree that the next step is to reset the NAS to use DHCP.
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