Network Access: Difference between revisions
No edit summary |
|||
Line 11: | Line 11: | ||
==Troubleshooting== |
==Troubleshooting== |
||
There are two principle issues: |
There are two principle issues: |
||
1. Is the machine accessible from the outside? This is usually solved with port forwarding. Wikipedia has a basic explanation: |
1. Is the machine accessible from the outside? This is usually solved with port forwarding. Wikipedia has a basic explanation: |
||
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Port_forwarding . Your hardware manufacturer's site should have specific instructions for configuring your router. |
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Port_forwarding . Your hardware manufacturer's site should have specific instructions for configuring your router. |
Revision as of 13:10, 15 July 2010
If you choose to connect to your home server from another PC or phone, you can use the test feature and the access key (from MC Options > Media Network) for access to your home PC.
- The access key is a six character alphabetic string, which tells another copy of MC what server and IP address to connect to.
- The test feature attempts to connect from a J. River server directly to the server running on your PC. It the port is open all the way, it will succeed.
The port you use must be accessible (not blocked by a firewall) from outside your network, and you must be using the outside address of your network. A cable modem, for example, has both an inside and an outside address. The outside address is the only one accessible from the Internet. You can find out what your outside address is by visiting whatsmyip.org.
Addresses like 192.168.0.* or 192.168.1.* are special addresses used only on internal networks. You can't connect to one of these from outside the network, unless your router makes the switch. This is called NAT (Network Address Translation). You might need, for example, to connect to 214.111.133.10 from outside your network, and your router might convert that to 192.168.0.15. The latter is a sort of "fake" address not visible from the Internet.
Troubleshooting
There are two principle issues:
1. Is the machine accessible from the outside? This is usually solved with port forwarding. Wikipedia has a basic explanation: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Port_forwarding . Your hardware manufacturer's site should have specific instructions for configuring your router.
2. Is the port on your machine open? This is a firewall configuration issue. On newer versions of Windows, this is probably controlled by Windows firewall.
MC's Options for Media Network offers a way to test access. It asks a J. River server to attempt to connect back. If the above two configuraton issues are solved, MC's test will succeed.