Difference between revisions of "Transition to Amahi"
From Amahi Wiki
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+ | Probably one of the most difficult part of transitioning to using your Amahi HDA with the full recommended experience is to get all systems to use your HDA for DNS. | ||
+ | |||
+ | A typical symptom is that | ||
http://hda | http://hda | ||
is not reachable and leads to some site on the internet (like amahi.net). | is not reachable and leads to some site on the internet (like amahi.net). | ||
− | For best results, we recommend that you fully transition your network to using your Amahi server | + | For best results, we recommend that you fully transition your network to using your Amahi server at least for DNS. |
− | The simplest way to do this is to do these things in the following order | + | The easiest and simplest way to do this is to do these things in the following order: |
# turn off all other DHCP servers in your network, typically in your router/gateway | # turn off all other DHCP servers in your network, typically in your router/gateway |
Revision as of 08:13, 14 January 2015
Probably one of the most difficult part of transitioning to using your Amahi HDA with the full recommended experience is to get all systems to use your HDA for DNS.
A typical symptom is that
http://hda
is not reachable and leads to some site on the internet (like amahi.net).
For best results, we recommend that you fully transition your network to using your Amahi server at least for DNS.
The easiest and simplest way to do this is to do these things in the following order:
- turn off all other DHCP servers in your network, typically in your router/gateway
- restart the networking (or the whole device) in your client device. Turn off WiFi and turn it on if it has WiFi, or simply reboot
If you have any fixed IP devices in your network from your router settings, you can also set them in your HDA under Setup > Networking.
If you have further networking trouble, consult the Network Troubleshooting page.