Printers on the network
Printers on the network
Identify the printer model you're configuring. Determine the subnet mask and IPv4 gateway displayed, and suggest appropriate values based on your network setup.
It might be simpler to relocate the network printer to the correct subnet. Give it a fixed IP address within that same subnet. The simplest option is to enable communication between the two subnets. You'll need to adjust your network firewall settings so they permit traffic flow in both directions or set up a jumbo subnet. Are you prepared to experiment with ARP routing tables? You could manually adjust the routing on each client device, but it would be a tedious process for such a minor task.
Despite using identical subnet and gateway settings, I can't locate the network printer on the router or add it using its IP address. Also, I don’t have the admin credentials needed to modify firewall configurations. A fixed IP address would resolve this later.
when a different IP and subnet mask appear after connecting to another port, that port is assigned a separate VLAN. this setup mimics having a distinct switch not linked to your current network. to verify functionality, consult your IT specialist who configured the router or switch, so they can assign the same VLAN to another port. for devices like printers, you should manually set a static IP to maintain consistency across the network.