Hi,
I have an XB6 modem in bridge mode with 2 external IPs and 2 Asus routers, each has 1 IP. I port forwarded on first router with no issues, but I need the same port forwarded on the second router. Obviously it should work having 2 separate external IPs. The issue I’m having here is none of the ports can be forwarded at all on router #2. Could be that modem being in bridge mode falls under double NAT or something?
What’s going on, any suggestions?
@Spartan01 -- Could be that modem being in bridge mode falls under double NAT ??
A "bridged" cable-modem does not do any NAT (Network Address Translation) -- it becomes just a "hub" device to "pass-through" the two "public" Shaw IP-addresses to your two routers.
or something?
You should be able to access the web-interface on "router #2" to configure that router to port-forward. Is this not working for you?
It should: Shaw infrastructure -> Shaw modem/bridge -> Ethernet port #2 -> Router #2 -> your computer -> Router #2's internal web-interface.
Disconnect the power from the Shaw device, wait a minute, and reconnect the power, to "reset" it. Each of your routers should then receive a "public" IP-address from Shaw's DHCP-server.
If you previously have connected a computer to the Shaw device, it will have "consumed" one of your two IP-addresses, and the Shaw device "knows" this fact. So, the power-off/power-on resets the device, to allow each of your routers to consume your two allowed IP-addresses.
Thanks for replying. I’m getting 2 IPs off the the XB6 just fine. My problem is, the second modem can’t do port forwarding for some reason. When I check if that port is open, it is not. I checked 2 different routers as “router #2”. (Every time power cycled the modem obviously in order to assign an IP.)
Gotta be something with XB6 assigning the second IP I guess. They’re both assigned through “one pipe” and might limit some features for second IP?
Will the router port forward if it is connected alone?
No. I just tried that. The thing is, even if it’s alone it get the same IP assigned as being both connected since the modem binded the MAC address of router#2.
Another thing I noticed, if I connect another router instead as router#2 it gets a totally different IP than previous router connected as router#2. Is this normal?
Yes that is normal to get a different IP because it has a different MAC address. I wonder if you need to add a switch, so modem > switch > routers. I would think it would work the way it was setup.
You mean, combine both IP addresses through a switch and then each router connected to that switch?
Ya, kind of a long shot, but that is how we connected legacy modems that had more than one ip and had just one port. If you have access to a switch I would give it a try.
You probably mean a managed switch that can handle multiple public ip addresses.
I just ordered a multiple WAN port router in order to handle both IPs and connect 2 switches to it. I can configure that router to give separate private IPs to each switch. That’s my plan, I hope it’ll work. I’ll let you know.
@Spartan01 -- Will the router port forward if it is connected alone?
Try this:
Results?
Repeat all the above steps, but use your "second" router, not your "third" router. Results?