User's Manual
Table Of Contents
- Contents Overview
- Table of Contents
- Introduction
- Introducing the Web Configurator
- Internet / Wireless Setup Wizard
- Tutorials
- 4.1 Overview
- 4.2 Setting Up Your DSL Connection
- 4.3 IPv6 Address Configuration
- 4.4 Setting Up a Secure Wireless Network
- 4.5 Configuring the MAC Address Filter for Restricting Wireless Internet Access
- 4.6 Setting Up NAT Forwarding for a Game Server
- 4.7 Configuring Firewall Rules to Allow a Specified Service
- 4.8 Configuring Static Route for Routing to Another Network
- 4.9 Port Binding Configuration
- 4.10 Configuring QoS to Prioritize Traffic
- 4.11 Access the AMG1302/AMG1202-TSeries from the Internet Using DDNS
- Connection Status and System Info Screens
- Broadband
- Wireless LAN
- Home Networking
- Static Route
- Quality of Service (QoS)
- Network Address Translation (NAT)
- Port Binding
AMG1302/AMG1202-TSeries User’s Guide 135
CHAPTER 9
Static Route
9.1 Overview
The AMG1302/AMG1202-TSeries usually uses the default gateway to route outbound traffic from
computers on the LAN to the Internet. To have the AMG1302/AMG1202-TSeries send data to
devices not reachable through the default gateway, use static routes.
For example, the next figure shows a computer (A) connected to the AMG1302/AMG1202-TSeries’s
LAN interface. The AMG1302/AMG1202-TSeries routes most traffic from A to the Internet through
the AMG1302/AMG1202-TSeries’s default gateway (R1). You create one static route to connect to
services offered by your ISP behind router R2. You create another static route to communicate with
a separate network behind a router R3 connected to the LAN.
Figure 55 Example of Static Routing Topology
WAN
R1
R2
A
R3
LAN