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Forum Discussion
Gabreil
May 11, 2020Aspirant
Can't port forward
Hello, for the past year or so I've been trying to port forward the port 25565 to host a dedicated Minecraft server for me and my friends. I was always able to join with my local ipv4 address but my ...
- May 13, 2020
> If you look at the picture I uploaded, you can see that the question
> "Does your Internet connection require a login?" is answered No. [...]That's an argument between you and your ISP. If you have Internet
access, then that's not the problem.But, while we're looking at that picture...
> https://community.netgear.com/t5/x/x/m-p/1859106
> Does the IP address of the WAN/Internet interface of your router
> match what you're using as your public IP address from the outside
> world? ADVANCED > ADVANCED Home : Internet Port : Internet IP AddressBASIC > Internet : Internet IP Address : IP Address (as shown in your
picture) provides the same critical fact: 100.68.<blur>.<blur>. Plug
that address into the form at: https://whois.arin.net/ .As you can see, that's not a public IP address. My guess would be
that your ISP is using carrier-grade NAT, and that's defeating your
attempts at port forwarding.https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carrier-grade_NAT
The only solutions I know are: 1) to ask your ISP for a real public
address (for which they might charge more), or 2) to use a tunneling
service like the one mentioned in another thread (near the end):https://community.netgear.com/t5/x/x/m-p/1748431
Some ISPs do not permit servers for residential customers, but I'm
confident that they'll tell you that if you ask.
Gabreil
May 13, 2020Aspirant
In response to your response about the picture of my port forwarding i provided; Yes, 192.168.1.150 is my PCs ipv4 address, the one you're supposed to pick when port forwarding.
I also tried making a new rule in the Windows 10 firewall that allows connection through the port 7777.
I have no idea what I'm supposed to do now. Is it possible for you to give me some kind of instructions step by step? As I said before, I'm not very knowledgable when it comes to this.
If you look at the picture I uploaded, you can see that the question "Does your Internet connection require a login?" is answered No. Should I change anything on this page or is this fine the way it is? I'm not sure if it is related to port forwarding at all. And yes, it requires a password to access my Wi-Fi, it's secured with WPA2-PSK [AES].
antinode
May 13, 2020Guru
> If you look at the picture I uploaded, you can see that the question
> "Does your Internet connection require a login?" is answered No. [...]
That's an argument between you and your ISP. If you have Internet
access, then that's not the problem.
But, while we're looking at that picture...
> https://community.netgear.com/t5/x/x/m-p/1859106
> Does the IP address of the WAN/Internet interface of your router
> match what you're using as your public IP address from the outside
> world? ADVANCED > ADVANCED Home : Internet Port : Internet IP Address
BASIC > Internet : Internet IP Address : IP Address (as shown in your
picture) provides the same critical fact: 100.68.<blur>.<blur>. Plug
that address into the form at: https://whois.arin.net/ .
As you can see, that's not a public IP address. My guess would be
that your ISP is using carrier-grade NAT, and that's defeating your
attempts at port forwarding.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carrier-grade_NAT
The only solutions I know are: 1) to ask your ISP for a real public
address (for which they might charge more), or 2) to use a tunneling
service like the one mentioned in another thread (near the end):
https://community.netgear.com/t5/x/x/m-p/1748431
Some ISPs do not permit servers for residential customers, but I'm
confident that they'll tell you that if you ask.