Troubleshooting The Isp Connection; Troubleshooting A Tcp/Ip Network Using A Ping Utility; Testing The Lan Path To Your Gateway - NETGEAR CG3000D User Manual

Wireless cable gateway
Hide thumbs Also See for CG3000D:
Table of Contents

Advertisement

Wireless Cable Gateway CG3000D/CG3100D User Manual

Troubleshooting the ISP Connection

If your gateway is unable to access the Internet and your Cable Link LED is on, you may need to
register the Cable MAC Address and/or Device MAC Address of you gateway with your cable
service provider.
Additionally, your PC may not have the gateway configured as its TCP/IP gateway. If your PC
obtains its information from the gateway by DHCP, reboot the PC and verify the gateway address.
See the link to the online document

Troubleshooting a TCP/IP Network Using a Ping Utility

Most TCP/IP terminal devices and routers contain a ping utility that sends an echo request packet
to the designated device. The device then responds with an echo reply. Troubleshooting a TCP/IP
network is made easier by using the ping utility in your PC or workstation.

Testing the LAN Path to Your Gateway

You can use ping to verify that the LAN path to your gateway is set up correctly.
To ping the gateway from a PC running Windows 95 or later:
1. From the Windows toolbar, click on the Start button and select Run.
2. In the field provided, type Ping followed by the IP address of the gateway, as in this example:
ping 192.168.0.1
3. Click OK.
You should see a message like this one:
Pinging <IP address> with 32 bytes of data
If the path is working, you see this message:
Reply from < IP address >: bytes=32 time=NN ms TTL=xxx
If the path is not working, you see this message:
Request timed out
6-4
"ITCP/IP Networking Basics" in Appendix
v1.0, September 2009
B.
Troubleshooting

Hide quick links:

Advertisement

Table of Contents
loading

This manual is also suitable for:

Cg3100d

Table of Contents