Route to subnet while using WLAN












0














I have the following network setup:



                  INTERNET
|
| 192.168.10.1
+----------+
|ISP ROUTER|
+----------+
| |
ether/wlan +----+ +-----+ ether
192.168.10.10 | | 192.168.10.20
+--------+ +----------------+
| HOST A | | HOST B |
+--------+ | |
| +--------+ |
| | HOST C | |
| | VM | |
| +--------+ |
| 192.168.50.50 |
+----------------+


My goal is to connect from HOST A to HOST C which is a virtual machine running on HOST B. When HOST A is connected to my ISP's router via ethernet cable then I can simply add the following route on HOST A:



ip route add 192.168.50.0/24 via 192.168.10.20


This works and I can reach HOST C from HOST A. However, this does not work when I connect HOST A via WLAN to my router because the WLAN card cannot directly communicate with 192.168.10.20. I can issue



ip route add 192.168.10.1 dev wlan0
ip route add 192.168.10.0/24 via 192.168.10.1 dev wlan0


which enables HOST A to at least be able to connect to HOST B, but if I try use



ip route add 192.168.50.0/24 via 192.168.10.20


to connect to HOST C then I get the error message:



RTNETLINK answers: Network is unreachable


Is there a way to connect from HOST A to HOST C when I use WLAN on HOST A1? Please keep in mind, that I cannot configure any routes on the router.










share|improve this question






















  • Are you sure the router doesn't deliberately have "Wi-Fi Client Isolation" enabled?
    – grawity
    Dec 8 '18 at 19:02










  • @grawity I do not know how "Client Isolation" works, so I am not sure if my router does this. I checked, however, but did not find any settings that might indicate that "Client Isolation" is enabled.
    – nautical
    Dec 8 '18 at 19:13
















0














I have the following network setup:



                  INTERNET
|
| 192.168.10.1
+----------+
|ISP ROUTER|
+----------+
| |
ether/wlan +----+ +-----+ ether
192.168.10.10 | | 192.168.10.20
+--------+ +----------------+
| HOST A | | HOST B |
+--------+ | |
| +--------+ |
| | HOST C | |
| | VM | |
| +--------+ |
| 192.168.50.50 |
+----------------+


My goal is to connect from HOST A to HOST C which is a virtual machine running on HOST B. When HOST A is connected to my ISP's router via ethernet cable then I can simply add the following route on HOST A:



ip route add 192.168.50.0/24 via 192.168.10.20


This works and I can reach HOST C from HOST A. However, this does not work when I connect HOST A via WLAN to my router because the WLAN card cannot directly communicate with 192.168.10.20. I can issue



ip route add 192.168.10.1 dev wlan0
ip route add 192.168.10.0/24 via 192.168.10.1 dev wlan0


which enables HOST A to at least be able to connect to HOST B, but if I try use



ip route add 192.168.50.0/24 via 192.168.10.20


to connect to HOST C then I get the error message:



RTNETLINK answers: Network is unreachable


Is there a way to connect from HOST A to HOST C when I use WLAN on HOST A1? Please keep in mind, that I cannot configure any routes on the router.










share|improve this question






















  • Are you sure the router doesn't deliberately have "Wi-Fi Client Isolation" enabled?
    – grawity
    Dec 8 '18 at 19:02










  • @grawity I do not know how "Client Isolation" works, so I am not sure if my router does this. I checked, however, but did not find any settings that might indicate that "Client Isolation" is enabled.
    – nautical
    Dec 8 '18 at 19:13














0












0








0







I have the following network setup:



                  INTERNET
|
| 192.168.10.1
+----------+
|ISP ROUTER|
+----------+
| |
ether/wlan +----+ +-----+ ether
192.168.10.10 | | 192.168.10.20
+--------+ +----------------+
| HOST A | | HOST B |
+--------+ | |
| +--------+ |
| | HOST C | |
| | VM | |
| +--------+ |
| 192.168.50.50 |
+----------------+


My goal is to connect from HOST A to HOST C which is a virtual machine running on HOST B. When HOST A is connected to my ISP's router via ethernet cable then I can simply add the following route on HOST A:



ip route add 192.168.50.0/24 via 192.168.10.20


This works and I can reach HOST C from HOST A. However, this does not work when I connect HOST A via WLAN to my router because the WLAN card cannot directly communicate with 192.168.10.20. I can issue



ip route add 192.168.10.1 dev wlan0
ip route add 192.168.10.0/24 via 192.168.10.1 dev wlan0


which enables HOST A to at least be able to connect to HOST B, but if I try use



ip route add 192.168.50.0/24 via 192.168.10.20


to connect to HOST C then I get the error message:



RTNETLINK answers: Network is unreachable


Is there a way to connect from HOST A to HOST C when I use WLAN on HOST A1? Please keep in mind, that I cannot configure any routes on the router.










share|improve this question













I have the following network setup:



                  INTERNET
|
| 192.168.10.1
+----------+
|ISP ROUTER|
+----------+
| |
ether/wlan +----+ +-----+ ether
192.168.10.10 | | 192.168.10.20
+--------+ +----------------+
| HOST A | | HOST B |
+--------+ | |
| +--------+ |
| | HOST C | |
| | VM | |
| +--------+ |
| 192.168.50.50 |
+----------------+


My goal is to connect from HOST A to HOST C which is a virtual machine running on HOST B. When HOST A is connected to my ISP's router via ethernet cable then I can simply add the following route on HOST A:



ip route add 192.168.50.0/24 via 192.168.10.20


This works and I can reach HOST C from HOST A. However, this does not work when I connect HOST A via WLAN to my router because the WLAN card cannot directly communicate with 192.168.10.20. I can issue



ip route add 192.168.10.1 dev wlan0
ip route add 192.168.10.0/24 via 192.168.10.1 dev wlan0


which enables HOST A to at least be able to connect to HOST B, but if I try use



ip route add 192.168.50.0/24 via 192.168.10.20


to connect to HOST C then I get the error message:



RTNETLINK answers: Network is unreachable


Is there a way to connect from HOST A to HOST C when I use WLAN on HOST A1? Please keep in mind, that I cannot configure any routes on the router.







networking wireless-networking routing






share|improve this question













share|improve this question











share|improve this question




share|improve this question










asked Dec 8 '18 at 18:51









nautical

1679




1679












  • Are you sure the router doesn't deliberately have "Wi-Fi Client Isolation" enabled?
    – grawity
    Dec 8 '18 at 19:02










  • @grawity I do not know how "Client Isolation" works, so I am not sure if my router does this. I checked, however, but did not find any settings that might indicate that "Client Isolation" is enabled.
    – nautical
    Dec 8 '18 at 19:13


















  • Are you sure the router doesn't deliberately have "Wi-Fi Client Isolation" enabled?
    – grawity
    Dec 8 '18 at 19:02










  • @grawity I do not know how "Client Isolation" works, so I am not sure if my router does this. I checked, however, but did not find any settings that might indicate that "Client Isolation" is enabled.
    – nautical
    Dec 8 '18 at 19:13
















Are you sure the router doesn't deliberately have "Wi-Fi Client Isolation" enabled?
– grawity
Dec 8 '18 at 19:02




Are you sure the router doesn't deliberately have "Wi-Fi Client Isolation" enabled?
– grawity
Dec 8 '18 at 19:02












@grawity I do not know how "Client Isolation" works, so I am not sure if my router does this. I checked, however, but did not find any settings that might indicate that "Client Isolation" is enabled.
– nautical
Dec 8 '18 at 19:13




@grawity I do not know how "Client Isolation" works, so I am not sure if my router does this. I checked, however, but did not find any settings that might indicate that "Client Isolation" is enabled.
– nautical
Dec 8 '18 at 19:13










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