Routing
Summary
This chapter is an overview of the Routing section in RUT devices.
Static Leases
Static routes specify over which interface and gateway a certain host or network can be reached. In this page you can configure your own custom routes.
Field name | Value | Description |
---|---|---|
Routing table | Main | WAN | WAN2 | WAN3; Default: WAN | Defines which table will be used for the route in question |
Interface | LAN | WAN(wired) | WAN2(Mobile) | WAN3(WiFi) | VPN instances; Default: WAN(wired) | The zone where the target network resides |
Destination address* | ip; Default: 0.0.0.0 | The address of the destination network |
Netmask* | ip; Default: 0.0.0.0 | A Mask that is applied to the Target to determine to what actual IP addresses the routing rule applies |
Gateway | ip; Default: " " | Defines where the router should send all the traffic that applies to the rule |
Metric | integer; Default: 0 | A Metric is used as a sorting measure. If a packet about to be routed fits two rules, the one with the higher metric is applied |
*Additional notes on Destination & Netmask:
You can define a rule that applies to a single IP like this: Destination - some IP; Netmask - 255.255.255.255. Furthermore, you can define a rule that applies to a segment of IPs like this: Destination – some IP that STARTS some segment; Netmask – Netmask that defines how large the segment is. e.g.:
IP | Netmask | Description |
---|---|---|
192.168.55.161 | 255.255.255.255 | Only applies to 192.168.55.161 |
192.168.55.0 | 255.255.255.0 | Applies to IPs in the 192.168.55.0 - 192.168.55.255 range |
192.168.55.240 | 255.255.255.240 | 192.168.55.240 - 192.168.55.255 |
192.168.55.161 | 255.255.255.0 | 192.168.55.0 - 192.168.55.255 |
192.168.0.0 | 255.255.0.0 | 192.168.0.0 - 192.168.255.255 |
Static ARP entries
Static ARP entries are used to bind a MAC address to a specific IP address. For example, if you want a device to get the same IP every time it connects to the router, you can create a Static ARP entry by binding that device’s MAC address to the desired IP address. The router will then create an entry in the ARP table, which in turn will make sure that that device will get the specified IP address every time.
Dynamic Routes
This section is still in the making.