There is a WiFi router. Clients are connected to it to access the Internet. Actually the question is: how to set up a router so that clients can be interconnected by a local grid?
2 answers
They and so in one local area network! It is not clear what is meant?
- If the wines 7 workgroups are located in the network control center there at the bottom there are links if there is a pig in my computer-> name com. -> The working group on all PCs should be the same in Latin letters - e_klimin
- I would like to add that by default for the workgroup only resources with anonymous or full access are visible (reflected in the network environment), in order to see a password-protected resource with an exact indication of the user (or group) - the user (or group) data must be present on the machine that is being accessed, and for M $ it is still necessary to enable the so-called "network browser service". If it comes to Linux segment or mixed segments, I would recommend reading about setting up SMB servers (samba). - shestgeo
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The question is not exactly asked ... (what is the router? What are the current settings?), But I will try to answer)))
In theory, a WiFi router, when connected to a client, issues via DHCP: the IP address of the connection (if it is not assigned manually) from the range specified in the settings. those. By default, all local clients are already on the same local subnet.
And it remains only to correctly set up working groups, or whatever you have, to access NetworkName - or you can immediately access the IP addresses of the content if the machines have open network resources.
- "And it remains only to correctly set up working groups" - yes, you need to set it up, because there is no direct connection. . How to do it ? - nullptr
- And among themselves the machines at least ping? - danila 1
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