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Att router set up
Att router set up










att router set up
  1. #Att router set up pro
  2. #Att router set up mac

This is what the Firewall | Status tab looked like when everything was working: When it came back up, it had the public WAN IP address. Success! (I never did find a way to restart it other than pulling the power.) I selected it, saved the changes, restarted the BGW210 again, and then finally restarted the UDM Pro.

#Att router set up mac

Going back to the Firewall | IP Passthrough tab, I now saw that same MAC address in the dropdown. After scanning, I saw two devices: the laptop I had plugged into the router that I was using to make the changes, and the UDM Pro. To get the right MAC address, I used the “Clear and Rescan for Devices” button on the BGW210’s Device | Device List tab. It turns out the MAC address displayed in the Unifi Controller interface is not the WAN1 MAC address.

#Att router set up pro

I looked in the Devices section of the Unifi Controller web interface and used the MAC address in the form.īut after restarting the BGW210-700 (from the Device | Restart Device tab) and then restarting the UDM Pro, the UDM Pro was still getting a 192.168.1.x IP address - not the public WAN IP address. The instructions I’d been following indicated that I needed to type in the MAC address of the router I wanted the passthrough to go to (the UDM Pro, in my case). The Passthrough Fixed MAC Address is what actually tripped me up the most. I needed to set the Allocation Mode to “Passthrough” and the Passthrough Mode to “DHCPS-fixed,” then select the Passthrough Fixed MAC Address from the list of devices.

att router set up

The Firewall | IP Passthrough tab was, obviously, the most important page in this process. I also turned off all of the “advanced filters” on the Firewall | Firewall Advanced tab. This is what it looked like when I was done: I wanted the UDM Pro to provide all of the firewall filtering, so I disabled the filters on the Firewall | Packet Filter tab. What worked for me was to leave DHCP enabled, Public Subnet off, and Cascaded Router off. But I still got a few things wrong along the way, so I thought I’d document what my BGW210-700 configuration looked like when I finally got my UDM Pro assigned the public WAN IP address. I found Reddit posts and Help/Support pages that got me most of the way there. The closest it comes to a bridge mode is its “IP Passthrough” mode. My research indicated that I’d want to enable “bridge mode” on my router, but it turns out the BGW210-700 doesn’t have support for a true bridge mode *. Unfortunately, some research showed that I couldn’t drop the AT&T router entirely it was providing the authentication for my internet service. With the UDM Pro, I had a real gateway, and I no longer needed my AT&T BGW210-700 gateway/router to handle any of the services it was previously performing. While there’s no question the Unifi Dream Machine Pro is overkill for a home network, it was just the combination of power, control, and convenience I’d been looking for. I’ve long wanted to have more control/flexibility in my home network, and 2020 finally gave me the justification to make some upgrades.












Att router set up