B593S-22 Huawey Router - Remote Management Issue - General Questions and Answers

Good Morning Folks. After a long and unsuccessful internet search I ask, for you expert assistence, if there is a way to remotely control the B593S-22 Huawey Router. I've only managed it via ddns only if I was connected to the same wifi network (FIY I have a public IP). I learned from various researches that some internet providers, a long time ago,provided a script (vivaupdater.exe) that enabled the port 8080 assigning it to the router's IP address (in native port forwarding it is impossible to set it) but I did not find anything more in Internet. Thanks in advance and I hope you can help me.

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How to get a real IP in my notebook?

I access internet via Internet sharing with my Polaris USB connection
I found my notebook would get a NAT ip (192.168.xxxx)
How can I do to get a real IP?
http://www.whatismyip.org/
I mean I want my notebook to get the real IP not NAT
your laptop have 1 ip for each nic wifi and wired and firewire and bluetooth nic
connected and then it have the loopback adaptor
in a console on your laptop you can type ipconfig and have them listed
Sorry my poor English
All I need is to access my notebook's web site by my friends
so I want a real IP to tell my friend
I can browse other web site by using Internet sharing
but my friend can not browse my web site if I use my Polaris to the Internet
I found there was some HTC USB modem driver to use.
but it seems no use on the Polaris
You have a web-server active on your notebook and it is connected in lan at your home, and you want to view this website from internet when you are in your friend's home: it's right?
If I've understand, you must point at the public IP address of your home's internet access (you can find it in site like http://www.whatismyip.org/), but before this, you must forward the port 80 in your router to the private address of your notebook.
Hoping that he was quite clear...
P.S.: Also my English is not the greatest ...
caliu said:
I access internet via Internet sharing with my Polaris USB connection
I found my notebook would get a NAT ip (192.168.xxxx)
How can I do to get a real IP?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
It was my understanding that with Internet Sharing on WM6, clients are placed into a DMZ and all incoming connections will go to the client.
That means that your web / ftp / etc server should work fine.
However, if your mobile provider makes you use a proxy to access the internet, then incoming connections are not possible.
I'm going to bet that this is what is happening to you, and there is nothing you can do to solve this problem.

can someone explain the ICM to me please?

Hi there!
Maybe I'm just too stupid, but I've benn trying for weeks now to setup the network parameters for my University's Campus network and failed miserably, so could someone please explain to me how this darn "Internet Connection Manager" works?
What I need in brief:
How can I setup a proxy to use with and only with
- HTTP(S) and FTP(S)
for a WiFi-Network that
- is NOT encrypted
- does NOT require dialing a number / accessing a modem
- does NOT use a VPN
??
Whenever I try this it always results in the connection dying completely.
In other words: When I select my standard UMTS-uplink as "default connection for programs connecting automatically" and then manually establish a WiFi-connection I can reach all computers available on the campus network get ping responses and everything, but I cannot use a proxy, hence not load off-campus pages.
When I define a new connection and enter my settings (just WiFi-name and the proxy details) I can still establish a WiFi-connection, but get a ping timeout even on the access point and the intranet servers usually available through the WiFi. No SSH login, no intranet, nothing (but I do get an IP assigned & stuff)
Here's what I would like to do in theory:
=> Manually connect to a WiFi-Network called "tuwlan".
. -open network
. -no encryption
. -IP, netmask, gateway, nameserver etc provided automatically by DHCP
=> Establish a SSH2 (SecureShell) connection to our on-campus proxy server and tunnel some ports to get through the Subnets (extremely restrictive) firewall.
. -SSH including port forwarding done with PockeTTY, works like a charm
=> Use Opera Mobile to surf web pages and FTP Sites through the proxy "localhost:40081" (which is forwarded to our campus proxy server through SSH2).
=> The Proxy only knows HTTP(S) and FTP(S), so all other programs (ICQ, Skype etc) are not to use it!
This setup used to work great with older Opera versions, but they removed the proxy setting dialog in favor of directly using the ICM settings.
So now I'm stuck with Microsofts Internet Connection Manager
Can anyone please help me to get this working?

How to set DNS while using static IP over WiFi

I'm connecting with my HTC S710 to a WiFi with a static IP. The WiFi connection is set, I can ping other devices within the network but I can't view web pages and synchronize mails. I did lot of tests and I found that the problem is DNS! When I use IP address instead of www.something.com I can view the WWW site!
Does anybody know how to set DNS in my smartphone? DNS address is the same as gateway's in my case.
There's no possibility. Either you activate DHCP on your WiFi Gateway or you use a third party software that allows you to define WiFi profiles.
Does this one work for you? http://www.freewarepocketpc.net/ppc-download-wifi-profiles-v0-0-2.html (although it is originally designed for PPCs)
Hallo fwmone,
thanks for your post!
I have just installed the Wifi Profile program but it's for PPC so there are problems with filling in the right values. I hope I'll be able to figure out how to use it. Anyway the programmer is also Czech so I've wrote him an email asking whether he plans to build Smartphone version..
The wifi I connect to is a local provider and unfortunately he uses static IPs
I'm really surprised that Vox doesn't have such a simple thing like DNS manual settings.
Yeah, the static IP functionality is quite useless without the possibility to set a DNS server.
Means "local provider" you're using some type of wireless internet at home or is it at a location where you can't control the situation? As long as you're using the service at home, you might install a WAP that works as a repeater for the WAN and offers DHCP functionality.
Hi fwmone!
So the problem is solved! The application WiFi Profiles v0.0.5 helped. Despite it's for PPCs it is possible to use it and to set all network configuration including DNS. After applying the profile the connection works fine! GREAT!!
Thanks for your hint!
FYI: that local provider covers our street and I don't control the router/access point. But you're right WAP repeater would be also a solution.
Nice that it worked!

[Q] ip subnet mask and gateway info for android portable wifi hot spots

ok, this may seem realy trivial but i have been searching for about three days for a way to find either my phones subnet mask and gateway id`s... i have found a few answers but they are rediculously complex and some only pertained to rooted phones which i do not have at this time... basically what im trying to do is connect my ds lite to my androids portable wifi hot spot.. the problen is the the encryption is so uptight and the ds lite is so underdeveloped the it cant auto obtain the ip adress... well i know my phones ip adress... the problem now is that manual setup doesnt allow you to enter JUST your ip adress and it auto obtain the subnet mask and gateway id.. it makes you enter it all ...
so does any one have any helpful info as to howto obtain these values.. or if perhaps the subnet mask and gateway values come from the wifi hotspot itself and if so how do i obtain them from he app being that it doesnt offer the info openly

Cannot access local lan web site (sometimes)

I have various machines on my lan in 192.168.1.*, I have a local DNS server to give those machines names. This normally works great, but my new Samsung Galaxy S21 sometimes says "cannot access" when I point it at a web address of a server running on my lan. I'll use a network utility app to do a DNS lookup of the other system, and it will tell me the correct address, then I'll use the same network utility to do a traceroute, and it will try to talk to a local IP I do not have in my network, in my DNS database, or anywhere in the set of addresses my router knows about. Where does this ghost address come from? Does the phone imagine that is the gateway it ought to be using for some reason? (The router's DHCP server certainly doesn't claim an unknown address is the gateway).
Every time I start trying to investigate the problem in more detail, everything suddenly starts working perfectly.
Does this ring a bell for anyone? Any clue what is going on? Maybe I should assign my phone's network statically and see if it works better.

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