Remote access: ip addresses – Swann 8 Channel DVR H.264 User Manual

Page 66

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Remote Access: IP addresses

Public and Private IP Addresses

The IP address used by the DVR, whether entered manually (STATIC) or assigned by

the dynamic host (DHCP) is the private IP address of the DVR. The private IP address

is used to locate the DVR on your private network. However, to access the DVR from

a remote location via the Internet, you’ll need to know your home network’s public

IP address.

What’s the difference?

The IP addressing system that the Internet utilizes at the moment supports up to

(approximately) 4 billion addresses. That is a lot, but it’s not enough for every device

connected to it (computers, phones, video game consoles, DVRs, servers, televisions

and even some refrigerators can all have Internet connections) to have individual

addresses. This problem is solved by assigning an address to each sub-network on

the Internet. This means that all LANs, such as your local network in your home or

office, will have a public IP address which will allow you to find that network from

anywhere connected to the Internet.
This means that all devices connected to your network share one public IP address.

To differentiate devices on your network, your network has its own IP address range,

and this is what is referred to as your private IP address. You’ll need to know the

private IP address if you’re using STATIC addressing and/or are Port Forwarding (i.e.

not using UPnP).
If you’re using DHCP addressing and have UPnP enabled on both the router and the

DVR, then you may not need to know the private IP address at all.

How do I find these addresses, and what should I do with them?

If you’re setting up a dynamic network (DHCP) then you don’t need to know the

private IP address of your DVR (it’ll probably change over time, anyway). Rather,

you only need to define the Media Port and Web Port. If you’re not using UPnP (if

possible, use UPnP - it’s just awesome) then configure your router to forward these

ports to the DVR.
If you’ve configured your network using STATIC IP addressing, then you’ll be entering

the private IP address directly into the DVR. Then you’ll need to choose your Web Port

and Media Port. Finally, you’ll have to configure your router to forward your selected

ports to the private IP address of the DVR.
Finally, to learn your network’s public IP address, you’ll need a computer with Internet

access connected via the same network as the DVR you’re configuring. Then, open

an Internet browser window. In the address bar, go to

www.whatismyip.com

. Your

public IP address will be displayed instantly!

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