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Limits on Port Forwarding Configuration

Limits on Port Forwarding Configuration

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163
06-11-2023, 10:01 PM
#1
Hello! Welcome to the forum. I'm just starting out and need some guidance on an issue with my router. It's limiting me to 20 ports forwarded, but I want to upgrade to something that allows up to 40 ports. I'm looking for a router that fits within a $300 budget. The model I have now is a Netgear AC1900. If anyone has any tips or links, it would be really helpful.
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badgergirl0315
06-11-2023, 10:01 PM #1

Hello! Welcome to the forum. I'm just starting out and need some guidance on an issue with my router. It's limiting me to 20 ports forwarded, but I want to upgrade to something that allows up to 40 ports. I'm looking for a router that fits within a $300 budget. The model I have now is a Netgear AC1900. If anyone has any tips or links, it would be really helpful.

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bluesaphire11
Junior Member
3
06-12-2023, 05:50 AM
#2
Have you checked for any external firmware available for the system?
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bluesaphire11
06-12-2023, 05:50 AM #2

Have you checked for any external firmware available for the system?

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LeCuriousFox
Member
227
06-12-2023, 06:32 AM
#3
ASUS RT models support 128 ports using RMerlin custom firmware. You might want to try updating your router's firmware or at least test it before purchasing a new device. If you can adjust which ports are active and forward multiple connections to one device, you can simplify your setup—like changing listening ports from 11111, 22222, 33333 to 11111, 11112, 11113 so all traffic goes to the same machine instead of separate rules. Updated August 1, 2020 by BobVonBob Needs RMerlin
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LeCuriousFox
06-12-2023, 06:32 AM #3

ASUS RT models support 128 ports using RMerlin custom firmware. You might want to try updating your router's firmware or at least test it before purchasing a new device. If you can adjust which ports are active and forward multiple connections to one device, you can simplify your setup—like changing listening ports from 11111, 22222, 33333 to 11111, 11112, 11113 so all traffic goes to the same machine instead of separate rules. Updated August 1, 2020 by BobVonBob Needs RMerlin

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Gabokazu
Posting Freak
814
06-12-2023, 12:23 PM
#4
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Gabokazu
06-12-2023, 12:23 PM #4

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GhostlierAxis
Junior Member
4
06-19-2023, 10:25 AM
#5
False, Asus routers are capped at 30 devices, though the RMerlin firmware can support up to 128 under certain conditions.
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GhostlierAxis
06-19-2023, 10:25 AM #5

False, Asus routers are capped at 30 devices, though the RMerlin firmware can support up to 128 under certain conditions.

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TheodorPH16
Junior Member
37
06-20-2023, 09:12 PM
#6
Yes, the numbers are correct. Stock at 32, RMerlin at 128. Sorry for the mistake.
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TheodorPH16
06-20-2023, 09:12 PM #6

Yes, the numbers are correct. Stock at 32, RMerlin at 128. Sorry for the mistake.

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Tango599
Member
165
06-20-2023, 10:09 PM
#7
No worries, TIL that 128 ports is possible thanks to you
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Tango599
06-20-2023, 10:09 PM #7

No worries, TIL that 128 ports is possible thanks to you

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pillowbanana
Member
63
06-20-2023, 11:11 PM
#8
Keeping configuration for many port-forwards requires only a few kilobytes, especially when saved in a text-based config file and even less in binary form. Creating this space isn't hard, even on a 4MB flash drive. I don’t know if OpenWRT sets a limit on port-forwards, even on such a small device. It’s also misleading to claim there’s no storage needed; the NVRAM is just a partition on the flash, similar to how firmware lives on the same flash but usually elsewhere. Today’s routers often have 16MB or more of flash and support adding extra apps and plugins.
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pillowbanana
06-20-2023, 11:11 PM #8

Keeping configuration for many port-forwards requires only a few kilobytes, especially when saved in a text-based config file and even less in binary form. Creating this space isn't hard, even on a 4MB flash drive. I don’t know if OpenWRT sets a limit on port-forwards, even on such a small device. It’s also misleading to claim there’s no storage needed; the NVRAM is just a partition on the flash, similar to how firmware lives on the same flash but usually elsewhere. Today’s routers often have 16MB or more of flash and support adding extra apps and plugins.

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VitoSEXY
Posting Freak
797
06-23-2023, 01:41 PM
#9
Right now you're using your modem to run the ports. If you switch to a router and connect it to the same modem, the modem's limits might block the router from creating additional ports.
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VitoSEXY
06-23-2023, 01:41 PM #9

Right now you're using your modem to run the ports. If you switch to a router and connect it to the same modem, the modem's limits might block the router from creating additional ports.