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Forum Discussion
OneJoe2
Jun 13, 2020Tutor
Should the R8000 UI see devices connected via a GS308 switch?
In the supplied user interface, on the Basic tab, "attached devices/wired devices" area, should I be seeing any info at all (like status, IP, MAC address) for devices on a connected GS308v2 or is ...
- Jun 13, 2020
You should see all devices connected to the switch
OneJoe2
Jun 17, 2020Tutor
cable modem -> R8000 router -> GS308 switch -> devices
This is considered after the router, yes?
I replaced the switch with a new GS308v3, changed to new cables and still can't "see" the devices on the switch.
All devices work fine if I connect them directly to the router but not on the (new) switch.
I assume it doesn't matter which of the 4 ports I use to connect the switch to the router and that it's okay to be using the other 3 ports for other devices simultaneously
And that it doesn't matter which port on the switch that I use to connect to the router?
Either my expectatons are wrong, the router is broken or my connections are wrong?
michaelkenward
Jun 17, 2020Guru
OneJoe2 wrote:
cable modem -> R8000 router -> GS308 switch -> devices
This is considered after the router, yes?
That's right. After all, you are asking the router to tell you what is connected to it.
Out of interest, but possibly relevant, what is this cable modem? Make and model?
OneJoe2 wrote:
I replaced the switch with a new GS308v3, changed to new cables and still can't "see" the devices on the switch.
All devices work fine if I connect them directly to the router but not on the (new) switch.
So, none of the devices that you add to the network through the new switch will work? Is that also the case for the old switch? Invisible and not working?
I ask because earlier on it was the invisibility that troubled you. Now it is that and the fact that they also don't work.
- OneJoe2Jun 17, 2020Tutor
The cable modem is a Cisco DCP3008.
Sorry if I misled about "can't see/doesn't work". None of the devices on the switch are accessible via the network. But the type of devices made that difficult for me to prove to myself. A webcam's propriety software is unable to find the device, I'm unable to map a NAS, and I dont have access to the Dlink router installed by the security company to confirm connectivity. So I moved went from a lack of proveable functionaly to trying to "see" they were even connecting to the network by checking the router UI.
But I may have found the problem. I removed all the cables fron the switch and reconnected them one at time, stopping to check the wired device status on the router UI. This first device I connect did appear on the wired devices list and the 2nd one did too. But when I connected the 3rd device, they all disappeared from "wired devices".
I'm guessing the chances of a new cable failing in the same way as the one it replaced is highly unlikely but that appears to be what's happening. I'll leave it disconnected until I can get a new cable and will monitor to ensure all is well.
Thank you your help and for being respectful while I thought this through.
- michaelkenwardJun 17, 2020Guru
OneJoe2 wrote:
The cable modem is a Cisco DCP3008.
If that is the DPC3008 then that rules out some possibilities.
OneJoe2 wrote:
But I may have found the problem. I removed all the cables fron the switch and reconnected them one at time, stopping to check the wired device status on the router UI. This first device I connect did appear on the wired devices list and the 2nd one did too. But when I connected the 3rd device, they all disappeared from "wired devices".
You seem to have homed in on the problem.Good research Sherlock.
You can narrow it down to the cable, and rule out the devices, by testing the third device with one of the other cables.
Maybe you did that.
- OneJoe2Jun 17, 2020Tutor
michaelkenward wrote:
OneJoe2 wrote:The cable modem is a Cisco DCP3008.
If that is the DPC3008 then that rules out some possibilities.
Yes .. DPC3008 .. typo.
The location of the third device is farthest from the switch and I have no "known good" cables that long. But I might unmount the device and bring it closer or just wait to get a cable that I can always use.
Again .. thanks!
- antinodeJun 17, 2020Guru
> That's right. [...]
It's "right" if you start ar your ISP, and count toward your own
computer. Obviously, it's the opposite if you start at your own
computer, and count toward your ISP. I'm unaware of any industry
standard, or any reasonable rationale, which says which way you should
view your network. (But I'm always open to enlightenment.) Hence:> I don't know what "before" or "after" a router means. It's an
> ambiguous nonsense concept. I do know what the WAN side and the LAN
> side of a router mean.Think about it. If you can.