Need Network Help

Ok, here is my setup:

Cable modem downstairs connected to Uplink on a HUB. One line comes out of out #2 and goes to my aunts PC. Another line comes out #4 and goes upstairs.

Upstairs:
The line coming up connects to the Uplink port on a ROUTER. Port # 2 is connected to the Mac, and port #3 is connected to the PC. However, the Mac can not connect to the internet, but both PCs can. Help! ::sleepy::. I have to use a PC! :(. P.S. - My ISP is Road Runner. Anybody?
 
Have you tried connecting the Mac directly to the modem or the hub and, thus, circumventing the router?
 
Hmm. Is your aunt's PC getting it's connection from the router upstairs, or is it actually getting the connection directly from the cable modem? If it's getting the connection from the cable modem, you probably need to change that. And if that's the case, it's probably just luck that the PC connected to the router is getting connected.
 
Simplifed:

Line comes out of cable modem, goes into hub, two lines come out of hub. One goes upstairs to router, other goes to my aunts PC. Router upstairs goes to Mac and PC. The Mac will connect if it is connected directly to the hub.
 
If I understand your set up, it looks like your router can connect to the Internet (because the PC connected to it upstairs works). Being a router (and assuming it is propertly configured), it shouldn't matter that two computers are connected. If one connects, both should connect (again, assuming the computers are correctly configured).

Question one: Do you use a PPPoE client to access the Internet? If that means nothing to you, do you use a special program on the downstairs PC with a username and password from your ISP to access the 'net? If so, do you use the same program on the upstairs PC? Or perhaps does your router handle that for you? (Most broadband routers have built-in PPPoE clients.) Also, if so, what do you do about the Mac?

Question two: When you compare the network settings of the upstairs PC and the Mac, are there any differences? Can you describe the settings for the PC? (for example, DHCP, gateway and DNS settings).

Question three: Does your Mac have any network activity? By that, I mean:
  • Do you see a link light on both the Mac and the router?
  • When you open the Network Utility (in the Utilities folder), does it say your computer has an IP address?
  • If you find can find out your upstairs PC's IP address, can you ping it from the Mac? (Ping is also in the Network Utility.)
  • Can you see the PCs on the network?
  • Can you see web pages based on their IP addresses? (For example, can you see anything when you go to http://82.165.252.92/ -- MacOSX.com's IP address, which should give you a splash page for 'digital crowd', the site's host.)
Finally, it's been a long time since I've used a hub, but I would put the router on the ground floor and run everything through it. If you are moving a lot of files between the second-floor PC and the Mac and you don't want that to affect the downstairs PC, it makes sense to keep them on their own network. If not, it might be simpler and it would certainly be safer to put the router between the modem and ALL the computers and let it do all the PPPoE authentication for you, and put the hub on the second floor. Then, you could set the computers' network settings to automatic-everything and be done with it.
 
Can you see your PC from your mac, that is through your router ?
Double check that your Mac is setup to receive an Ip adress from the router, I mean in DHCP mode.
 
Yes, the Mac is in DHCP mode. So is the PC. If I shut the PC down and restart the Mac, internet works. :confused:

P.S. - It's a Linksys EZX555W
 
riccbhard said:
If I shut the PC down and restart the Mac, internet works. :confused:

This could mean that your linksys is setup to deliver only 1 IP adress through DHCP..

please check this:
- shutdown both computers
- start the mac: what is the IP adress delivered to it by the router ?
- start the PC: what is the IP adress if any ?

- again shutdown both computers
- start the PC first: what IP ?
- start the mac: what IP if any ?

an explanation would be that your router has a setup of a "range" of IP adress to deliver via DHCP of only 1 IP address. Therefore the first computer to boot would take it and the second one would not be able to have a IP adress, would not access Internet nor see the other computers...

this will take 4 reboots but can be worth it...

let me know
 
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