I am still unable to reliably communicate with my ISY-99i via the Web interface. After a time, I just lose the ability to talk to it. Telnet connections are also refused, but it answers ping requests.
I suspect this is an issue caused by my network setup. In other words, I suspect it's my fault. I would like to try to describe my network and see if anyone has advice for how I resolve this.
The relevant parts of my network are that I have a cable modem, an Airport Express just behind that which all of my devices us to reach the Internet (directly or indirectly), and a second Airport Express the ISY-99i is connected to. That second Airport Express is set to "Extend a Wireless Network."
I've tried everything I can think of with this setup, but I just can't seem to get the ISY-99i stable. Here are some questions I have for the network gurus:
1. I really thought a DHCP Reservation on the main Airport Express (behind the cable modem) and just setting the ISY-99i to configure automatically from the DHCP server would work, but it doesn't seem to last. Is this because I have the second device in extend mode?
2. Do I want to configure automatically from DHCP server, or would it be preferable to static IP as the ISY-99i's configuration? I've tried both and haven't seem to find a winning combination. If I configure manually, which router would I call the "Gateway." The one the ISY-99i is connected to or the one behind the cable modem? Which one would it take it's DNS from (another setting)?
I found a post that very much describes my problem, in a different scenario:
http://forums.macrumors.com/showthread.php?t=539509
This is what led me to decide my network is the issue. It also led me to read this document from Apple:
http://manuals.info.apple.com/en_US/Designing_AirPort_Networks_10.5-Windows.pdf
That has me wondering if I need to setup a WDS as described in there, or have the second router join as a client (but then I don't know how to configure the ISY-99i).
As you can see, I'm a networking dummy and I'm lost. Any suggestions are appreciated.
Thanks.
James Edward Gray II