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You can get ethernet client bridges, such as the old Linksys WET11. As these have gone away a more practical idea is to buy an 'access point' ( not a router) and set it to client mode. Then it's just as though it were a (slow) ethernet cable, so there's only the port forwarding on the Tomato router.An even better idea, as stated by Dmitry Trukhanov is to use a USB or PCI wifi adaptor, you say IIS so that indicates Windows, and unless you're talking NT4 (in which case upgrade) Windows certainly has wifi support.Are you simply out of cable range for wire, per your diagram you should still have four fixed ethernet ports spare.
The problem is that I've Windows 7 Ultimate x64 and I can't get any drivers for my PENTAGRAM horNET Wi-Fi PCI P 6121-L6: RTL8185L that would actually work (I've spent too many hours on that). So now I'm using old laptop with Kerio WinRoute which bridges WiFi and my desktop, but I have to subnets 192.168.1.xxx wifi and 192.168.2.xxx behind Kerio WinRoute - that's temporary - I need to eliminate this laptop and get some kind of device that would do the same and wil ALLOW me to forward ports. Would ASUS WL-330GE be a good choice? Is it transparent so that port fwd occurs only on main router?–Apr 26 '10 at 12:24. Some of the firmware replacement distros for WRT54 can be used as a repeater/bridge. I have a Linksys WRT54GS on which I installed DD-WRT. From some instructions found on the net, I made it an access point, so it connects to the wireless network, and then provides an ethernet connection to whichever device I want to connect.
USB Network Gate requires the following ports to be open: On Windows these ports are used by UsbConfig.exe and UsbService.exe (or UsbService64.exe if you have a 64-bit OS). Single port forwarding is mostly used for routing all service specific network traffic on your local area network to be directed to a specific computer. This type of how to port forward would be ideal for an internal e-mail server that would take all network packets for the POP3 and SMTP services and forward them to an e-mail server on your.
I used the instructions here: fine for me, and solved a problem where I had a wifi-only location but had to connect multiple computers, some of which did not have wireless connectivity.