Ham Radio Skrevet 18. november 2010 Del Skrevet 18. november 2010 Hei. Jeg har montert opp denne routeren/modemet på hytta hvor jeg skal fjernstyre en Ham-Radio. Hvordan kan jeg hjemmefra komme inn på denne routeren? Vet at man må aktivisere "fjernstyring" i routeren, men finner ikke ut av det.... Lenke til kommentar
Youcef Skrevet 19. november 2010 Del Skrevet 19. november 2010 (endret) Advanced > Remote MGMT "Access Status" endrer du til "LAN & WAN" Endret 19. november 2010 av Youcef Lenke til kommentar
Ham Radio Skrevet 19. november 2010 Forfatter Del Skrevet 19. november 2010 Takk for svaret, er det slik at man bruker"8080" etter den normale IP adressen for å komme inn? Advanced > Remote MGMT "Access Status" endrer du til "LAN & WAN" Lenke til kommentar
Lars Dongeri Oppholdsnes Skrevet 19. november 2010 Del Skrevet 19. november 2010 Hvilket system skal du bruke for fjernstyring? Ham Radio Deluxe? Jeg satte opp et slikt system for en kompis tidligere. Du får normalt tilgang til interface på port 80, slik at det holder å legge inn http://ipadressen. Men det er jo ikke noe man normalt behøver å gjøre. Det man behøver er å sette opp en dyndns-konto slik at man får en fast 'adresse' og så må man forwarde port til radioPC eller radio. Lenke til kommentar
Ham Radio Skrevet 19. november 2010 Forfatter Del Skrevet 19. november 2010 Hei. Remoterig heter systemet, dette er koblet mellom radiodelen og routeren. Hjemme har jeg samme systemet mellom frontpanelet til radioen og routeren. (ingen PC behøves hær) Jeg har en DynDns konto som er aktivisert. Er det ipadressen til Routeren, eller på nettverket hjemme? Hvilket system skal du bruke for fjernstyring? Ham Radio Deluxe? Jeg satte opp et slikt system for en kompis tidligere. Du får normalt tilgang til interface på port 80, slik at det holder å legge inn http://ipadressen. Men det er jo ikke noe man normalt behøver å gjøre. Det man behøver er å sette opp en dyndns-konto slik at man får en fast 'adresse' og så må man forwarde port til radioPC eller radio. Lenke til kommentar
Lars Dongeri Oppholdsnes Skrevet 19. november 2010 Del Skrevet 19. november 2010 Dyndns er internettadressen til router. Pass på at du endrer lokal IP på routeren til 192.168.0.x. Regner med den er default 10.0.0.138 hvis du har Telenor. Dette for at den skal snakke med enhetene som bruker samme subnett. I routeren så bør du endre port for routerens webinterface. Routeren har en administrasjonsside som vanligvis bruker port 80. Du kan endre den til 8080, slik at port 80 blir ledig for remoterigs webinterface. Sett opp portforward i router for port 80 til ipadressen til remoterig 192.168.0.228. Forward også følgende: 5060 = SIP ( change in both ends if you already using SIP based IP-telephony) 11000 = RTP (audio) 12000 = Data channel, control commands Vær obs på at du kanskje må endre SIP-port, men bare prøv 5060 først. Firewalls One of the major obstacles when trying to remotely control something is the fact that the Internet Service Provider (ISP) forces us to use dynamic IP addresses. We can never know, from time to time, which IP address our 'modem' / firewall / router has on its outside interface (the IP address you will try to connect to). Most people use NAT routers that translates IP addresses on the inside (your little LAN) to one common IP address on the outside using Port conversion. To be able to stream audio and at the same time transfer CAT / CI-V commands or 'panel to radio communications' we need to know which IP port numbers are used for each service. There are some different techniques to fix this. At the operator end (or panel) there is normally OK just to use DHCP in the RRC-1258MkII. You need to set the IP adress or DNS-name to the Radio RRC. At the radio end the router must be configured in a way so port 5060, 11000 and 12000 (programmable) is directed to the radio RRC-1258MkII which should have a static IP address. The easy way to get connected is to set the RRC:s IP address as DMZ server in the router. This makes it possible to connect to all services (SIP, audio and control) as well as the web and telnet interfaces without further configuration. This is OK if you don't run a web server at home or if you are using SIP based IP telephony. If that is the case you need to change the port settings in both RRC:s and configure the router in a way that every service forwards packets to the right host on the inside. You will also need to register the radio end RRC to DynDNS or a similar service so you can use a host name to connect to the remote RRC regardless of its dynamic IP address (which can change without notice, but rarely does). The RRC_1258MkII has a built in DynDNS Client see Common config. The following IP ports are used (default and changeable) 5060 = SIP ( change in both ends if you already using SIP based IP-telephony) 11000 = RTP (audio) 12000 = Data channel, control commands 80 = WEB interface 23 = Telnet Interface SIP, RTP and DATA protocols are UDP-based , WEB and Telnet are TCP-based. Lenke til kommentar
Ham Radio Skrevet 19. november 2010 Forfatter Del Skrevet 19. november 2010 Tusen takk for meget utfyllende svar. Skal se om jeg ikke kommer meg på nett etter denne instruksjonen. Foreløpig takk for hjelpa. 73'de LA1RSA Dyndns er internettadressen til router. Pass på at du endrer lokal IP på routeren til 192.168.0.x. Regner med den er default 10.0.0.138 hvis du har Telenor. Dette for at den skal snakke med enhetene som bruker samme subnett. I routeren så bør du endre port for routerens webinterface. Routeren har en administrasjonsside som vanligvis bruker port 80. Du kan endre den til 8080, slik at port 80 blir ledig for remoterigs webinterface. Sett opp portforward i router for port 80 til ipadressen til remoterig 192.168.0.228. Forward også følgende: 5060 = SIP ( change in both ends if you already using SIP based IP-telephony) 11000 = RTP (audio) 12000 = Data channel, control commands Vær obs på at du kanskje må endre SIP-port, men bare prøv 5060 først. Firewalls One of the major obstacles when trying to remotely control something is the fact that the Internet Service Provider (ISP) forces us to use dynamic IP addresses. We can never know, from time to time, which IP address our 'modem' / firewall / router has on its outside interface (the IP address you will try to connect to). Most people use NAT routers that translates IP addresses on the inside (your little LAN) to one common IP address on the outside using Port conversion. To be able to stream audio and at the same time transfer CAT / CI-V commands or 'panel to radio communications' we need to know which IP port numbers are used for each service. There are some different techniques to fix this. At the operator end (or panel) there is normally OK just to use DHCP in the RRC-1258MkII. You need to set the IP adress or DNS-name to the Radio RRC. At the radio end the router must be configured in a way so port 5060, 11000 and 12000 (programmable) is directed to the radio RRC-1258MkII which should have a static IP address. The easy way to get connected is to set the RRC:s IP address as DMZ server in the router. This makes it possible to connect to all services (SIP, audio and control) as well as the web and telnet interfaces without further configuration. This is OK if you don't run a web server at home or if you are using SIP based IP telephony. If that is the case you need to change the port settings in both RRC:s and configure the router in a way that every service forwards packets to the right host on the inside. You will also need to register the radio end RRC to DynDNS or a similar service so you can use a host name to connect to the remote RRC regardless of its dynamic IP address (which can change without notice, but rarely does). The RRC_1258MkII has a built in DynDNS Client see Common config. The following IP ports are used (default and changeable) 5060 = SIP ( change in both ends if you already using SIP based IP-telephony) 11000 = RTP (audio) 12000 = Data channel, control commands 80 = WEB interface 23 = Telnet Interface SIP, RTP and DATA protocols are UDP-based , WEB and Telnet are TCP-based. Lenke til kommentar
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