Hi David,
Thanks! I can now "ping" both computer with less that 1 ms ping response
time. I turned off the firewalls on both machines the "ping" response
time immediately went to almost nothing. I now have the firewalls
turned back on after doing some configuring to accept the network and
the response time is still less than 1 ms. I have enabled printer
sharing and that seems to be working properly.
I want to have computer number two to be able to share the modem and
dialup connection in computer one if that is possible. I know dialup is
slow but it is better than nothing. I live in a very rural area and DSL,
etc., is not available here. High speed satellite is available but is
cost prohibitive for me ($700 installation and $80 per month). Any help
setting that up would be greatly appreciated.
Thanks for the help from all of you,
Loy
David Gillett wrote:
> 815 ms is a *huge* length of time for ping response between two computers
> on the same local subnet. Something is clearly not right.
>
> I've seen two scenarios where "A can oing B, but B can't ping A". The
> rare one results from an address conflict where some third machine is using
> the same address as B -- I think we can assume that's not your issue.
> The other is where some misconfigured firewall is partially blocking
> traffic beteen the two machines.
>
> David Gillett
>
>
> On 17 Aug 2007 at 6:43, Loy Pressley wrote:
>
> Date sent: Fri, 17 Aug 2007 06:43:17 -0500
> Send reply to: Personal Computer Hardware discussion List
> <[log in to unmask]>
> From: Loy Pressley <[log in to unmask]>
> Subject: Re: [PCBUILD] [Fwd: Connecting Two Computers]
> To: [log in to unmask]
>
>
>> Hi David and all,
>>
>> Thanks for this reply and I apologize for the delay in answering. There
>> was a family emergency here and I have been away for awhile.
>>
>> I configured the network as you recommended below, i.e., one computer
>> has an IP address of 192.168.2.1 and the other has 192.168.2.2. I can
>> "ping" 192.168.2.2 from 192.168.2.1 and get the following reply and get
>> a round trip time of average = 815ms. I CANNOT "ping" 192.168.2.1 from
>> 192.168.2.2 -- the "ping" request just times out.
>>
>> I want to be able to share files and printers on this network. The
>> printers are all connected to the 192.168.2.1 computer.
>>
>> BTW, the WinXP Pro computer, 192.168.2.1, has a NVIDIA nForce Networking
>> Controller. The WinXP Home computer, 192.168.2.2, has a 3Com Etherlink
>> XL 10/100 PCI. When I enabled the network on 192.168.2.1 I got a notice
>> that it was connected at 100mb.
>>
>> Thanks for the help...again, I apologize for the late reply.
>>
>> Loy
>>
>> David Gillett wrote:
>>
>>> On 26 Jul 2007 at 13:30, Loy Pressley wrote:
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>> I want to connect two computer for file and printer sharing. There is
>>>> an Ethernet connection on both computers. I bought a crossover cable
>>>> with RJ45 connectors on each end and connected the two computer using
>>>> the cable. When I made the connection, one of the computers began
>>>> flashing that a network cable was disconnected. I ran the network setup
>>>> wizard and told it to ignore the disconnected cable. It doesn't flash
>>>> any more but neither do the two computers appear to be able to see each
>>>> other.
>>>>
>>>> I am a complete buffoon at this. All I want to do in connect two
>>>> WinXPSP2 computers. One has WinXP Pro and the other WinXP Home.
>>>> According to everything I could find, all I needed was the right
>>>> crossover cable and I was ready to go. I ordered the cable and hooked
>>>> the two computers together and no joy. For this simple network I think
>>>> I have all the hardware I need. I certainly do need some help setting
>>>> it up, though. Any help would be greatly appreciated.
>>>>
>>>>
>>> Although it is possible to use a crossover cable to make a point-to-point
>>> connection like this, Ethernet is designed to use a hub or switch to
>>> interconnect multiple host machines. So each machine will need an IP
>>> address configured for its Ethernet adapter. These addresses need to be
>>> distinct, but within the same address range.
>>>
>>> The default configuration is going to say "Obtain address automatically",
>>> but this requires that some machine, with an address configured, be set up
>>> to hand out addresses to other machines. If you enable ICS (Internet
>>> Connection Sharing) on one of the machines, it can do that, but that may
>>> require that t also HAVE a separate Internet connection.
>>>
>>> A simpler approach is to assign each machine an address in a common
>>> private range. If you go through the Network config to the properties of
>>> the Ethernet connector, and look at TCP/IP proertires, you'll see three
>>> boxes -- address, subnet mask, and default gateway.
>>>
>>> All addresses that start with "192.168." are private, and are intended to
>>> be used with a mask of "255.255.255.0". Many retail network procts such as
>>> routers come preconfigured to use the 192.168.0.x or 192.168.1.x ranges, so
>>> let's use 192.168.2.x, where x is 1 on one machine and 2 on the other.
>>>
>>> The default gateway is the address of a devide that connects this private
>>> network to other address groups, including the whole internet. Since you're
>>> not connecting it, you can leave that blank.
>>>
>>> Once that is set one each PC, they should be able to see each other. From
>>> the one that is 192,168,2,1, open a command prompt and type "ping
>>> 192.168.2.2". You should get four responses showing a very brief time for a
>>> packet to reach the other machine and a response to be received.
>>>
>>> David Gillett
>>>
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