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Forum Discussion
MyNDIrish
Jul 26, 2021Aspirant
Port forwarding problems
I am having an issue with port forwarding. I have two laptops running off the same Netgear router (@10.0.0.1) - one at 10.0.0.5 and the other at 10.0.0.12. The apache server on 10.0.0.12 is listening on port 8080. Here is how I have this set up in my router
I can connect directly to the server using http://10.0.0.12:8080/test in a browser and it works fine
But when I try and connect through my router at 10.0.0.1 (http://10.0.0.1:8080/test), I get
what am i doing wrong?
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> Model: A7000|Nighthawk AC1900 WiFi USB Adapter - USB 3.0
Not a router. Look for "Model" on the product label. Firmware
version? Connected to what?> Here is how I have this set up in my router
Looks plausible to me.
> I can connect directly to the server using http://10.0.0.12:8080/test
> in a browser [...]"connect directly to the server" from _where_? Itself? The
(unspecified) system at "10.0.0.5"? Other?> But when I try and connect through my router at 10.0.0.1
> (http://10.0.0.1:8080/test), I get [...]Seems as if it ought to work, doesn't it?
> what am i doing wrong?Other than the sloppy problem description?
Relying on my notoriously weak psychic powers, my first guess would
be that you're using a D7000v2, whose firmware is defective, in that its
doesn't do NAT loopback (on which you're relying in such a case).To what is the WAN/Internet side of this mystery router connected?
Did you choose the "10.0.0.*" subnet intentionally for some reason or
other, or did the router choose it because it saw that its WAN side was
connected to a "192.168.0.*" subnet, or what?If the D7000v2 hypothesis is correct, then you might try accessing
your server from a system on the WAN side of the mystery router (using
the WAN/Internet address of the mystery router in the URL).For the usual problems with port forwarding, see:
- MyNDIrishAspirant
" Other than the sloppy problem description?"
Wow....attitude much? Never mind. I'd rather figure it out by myself.
MyNDIrish wrote:
" Other than the sloppy problem description?"
Wow....attitude much? Never mind. I'd rather figure it out by myself.
Kind of difficult to help someone who doesn't tell us what hardware they are trying to fix.
So excuse me for throwing more questions at you.
What firmware version do you have on the unnamed device?
A number is more useful than "the latest". (It may not be by the time people read this.) There can also be newer versions, or "hot fixes", that do not show up if you check for new firmware in the browser interface.
It might also help if you told people what the modem is in front of this router, if there is one. The model number could be useful. Is it, by any chance, also a router, with a set of LAN ports on the back?
The reason for asking is that a lot of people turn up here trying to put a router behind a modem that is also a router. That can complicate troubleshooting.
For example, like others, I am puzzled by the IP address of your router, 10.0.0.1.Did you set that deliberately? Or did your anonymous router pick that? (That could be a clue to your plight.)
Apologies for all the questions. But you can help people to help you by providing the information suggested in this forum's header:
Subject (Include model number and brief summary)
Model (Recommended - Helps the community give the best answers)
Body (Include additional detail including model version, firmware, OS and environment where relevant.)They are there for a good reason.
Apologies if this sounds rude. But you can't expect help if you don't tell people what you are doing and what your network looks like.