11-29-2018 06:27 PM - edited 11-30-2018 09:44 AM
Folks
I m super frustrated. i thought by getting the cisco RV340 router it will solve my problem by allowing me to create a static NAT for my private vLANs to access internet.
when connecting the RV340 router i got my ISP IP and created the needed vLAN to connect it to a SG300 L3 Switch, created the needed static routes needed to reach the private VLANS to connect to the rest of the network and static router
BUT
when it came to create a static NAT on the RV340 i needed to provide
1. Enter the starting IP address of the internal IP address range to map to the public range which is fine so i entered 192.168.0.0 to cover all my VLAN like 192.168.110 and 192.168.100.0
2.Enter the starting IP address of the public IP address range provided by ISP not including the router WAN IP address in this range which the only thing i got.. I DONT HAVE A RANGE.. since the IP is being obtained/provided via dhcp by the ISP through the bridge mode modem.
3. Select the name of the service, from the drop-down list, to apply for the Static NAT. so i selected all the service
4. Select the name of the interface from the drop-down list which is WAN1 port
the only options i have infront of me is to switch my home internet to business internet where i can get 5 static internet IPs from the ISP that i can then use for the range.
what do i do ? or can I use my only ISP network IP ?
appreciate any help
11-30-2018 12:19 PM
check this video should help you.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=azt7b8hMXHs
if you do not have static IP from provider, you can use dynadns for this.
12-03-2018 10:32 PM
Your ISP IP will work, until it doesn't.
Some let your lease go on for months/years, others tend to rotate them regularly (I have one of each).
Like the other poster mentioned, DYNDNS is one way to get a redirect, to a non-actually-static IP, as long as they're using your domain name(s), mapped from DYN.
I'm not sure this is necessarily what you're trying to do though? In fact, I really don't understand the motivation, can you expound a bit on why you want/need a static NAT, for the use-case you mentioned?
09-03-2019 03:52 PM
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