Este artículo lo guiará para abrir una cuenta adicional Wifi para tus invitados. Sólo proporcionará una conexión a Internet y por separado de la red principal. Por ejemplo, cuando se conecta a la red de invitados, el dispositivo no puede acceder a la red local, no puede iniciar sesión en la interfaz web, etc.
Nota: La red para invitados no está disponible en el modo de punto de acceso.
Paso 1: abre un navegador web y ve a http://cudy.net o http://192.168.10.1.
Para más información, consulte Cómo iniciar sesión en la interfaz web del router Cudy?
Paso 2: Vaya a Configuración avanzada->Red de invitados.
Paso 3: Cree una red para invitados de 2,4 GHz o 5 GHz según sus necesidades.
La red invitada predeterminada es una Wi-Fi abierta llamada 'Cudy-Guest-2.4G' o 'Cudy-Guest-5G'.
< /p>
Paso 4: Establecer Cifrado a Modo mixto WPA-PSK/WPA2-PSK y luego establezca una contraseña fácil de recordar.
< /p>
Paso 5: 'Guardar y guardar el archivo. Aplique' la configuración. Ahora puedes acceder a tu red de invitados usando el SSID y la contraseña que configuraste.
No habilitar Red oculta< /strong> a menos que quieras ingresar manualmente este SSID para el acceso Wi-Fi.
< /p>
26 comentarios
@Bialar
Dear Customer,
Thank you for contacting Cudy support team.
Sorry to tell you that the guest network is forbidden to access the devices in the main subnet. So you can’t access these devices from the internet. But We will provide your feedback to the product department for evaluation to make a change.
“Is there a way to access servers in the “main ip-space” from the guest network?
Example:
- Device gets a public IP-address 11.22.33.44 from ISP
- Trying to access servers (through port forwarding) using the IP above from guest network seems to fail
- Trying to access servers IP (on the “main IP space”) also fails. But this is of course expected so no problems here.
My case: I have kind of home automation systems running on a device connected to Cudy. These allow remote control using port forwarding. This remote control works if accessing them outside the guest network. In my case these services can be reached using cellular connection on a phone but not from guest network. It’s kind of funny that these can be reached from about anywhere in the internet except the guest network.
In ASUS-routers I have used this works (local devices can be accessed from guest network using public IP from ISP).
Device in question: Cudy P5 AX3000"
Is there a way to access servers in the “main ip-space” from the guest network?
Example:
- Device gets a public IP-address 11.22.33.44 from ISP
- Trying to access servers (through port forwarding) using the IP above from guest network seems to fail
- Trying to access servers IP (on the “main IP space”) also fails. But this is of course expected so no problems here.
My case: I have kind of home automation systems running on a device connected to Cudy. These allow remote control using port forwarding. This remote control works if accessing them outside the guest network. In my case these services can be reached using cellular connection on a phone but not from guest network. It’s kind of funny that these can be reached from about anywhere in the internet except the guest network.
In ASUS-routers I have used this works (local devices can be accessed from guest network using public IP from ISP).
Device in question: Cudy P5 AX3000
@Yaniv N,
Dear Customer,
Thank you for contacting Cudy support team.
For now, Cudy router doesn’t support the feature you mentioned. We will provide your feedback to the product department for evaluation.
“Why can’t I set up a guest network with the same IP address as the regular network? Or would there be an option to at least choose a different IP?
Or would there be an option to isolate it from the network and the computers wouldn’t see it on the network
And why isn’t there an option to set up an IoT network? Or would there be such a network built in, competitors have it, the disadvantage is that it doesn’t exist, it’s very convenient."
Why can’t I set up a guest network with the same IP address as the regular network? Or would there be an option to at least choose a different IP?
Or would there be an option to isolate it from the network and the computers wouldn’t see it on the network
And why isn’t there an option to set up an IoT network? Or would there be such a network built in, competitors have it, the disadvantage is that it doesn’t exist, it’s very convenient.
@apito,
Dear Customer,
Thank you for contacting Cudy support team.
We have plan to add this function in near future. Our R&D team are working on this. Please wait patiently.
“Hi, Is there any ongoing work for guest wifi in AP mode for M1800 devices?”