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The diagram below illustrates a case in which you have two routers in the
network. One router is used for broadband Internet sharing while another router
connects to a remote office. You may then define a static routing entry in the
access point to re-route the packets to the remote office.
In this network, the main office of subnet 192.168.168.0 contains two routers: the
office is connected to the Internet via the access point (192.168.168.1) and to
the remote office via 192.168.168.254. The remote office resides on a subnet
192.168.100.0.
You may add a static routing entry into the access point’s routing tables so that
IP packets from the clients in the main office with a destination IP address of
192.168.100.X (where X is any number from 2 to 254) will be routed to the router,
which acts as the gateway to that subnet.
INTERNET
Access point
192.168.168.1
Wireless Clients
Workstations
REMOTE
OFFICE
192.168.168.254
POTS
56K analo
g
modem
56K analo
g
modem
Subnet 192.168.100.0
Static Routing
Cable/ADSL
modem