MKR 1000 Wifi Web Server nicht erreichbar

Hallo zusammen,

hab mal wieder ne frage zum MKR1000.

Und zwar habe ich das WifiWebServer Beispiel aus der Wifi 101 libary auf meinen MKR1000 geladen.

Der Serial Monitor gibt mir folgendes aus:

Attempting to connect to SSID: Gast
SSID: Gast
IP Address: 192.168.0.165
signal strength (RSSI):-85 dBm

Was im grunde ja heißt, dass die Verbindung erfolgreich aufgebaut wurde und der Server läuft.

Nun mein Problem:
Wenn ich die oben ausgegebene IP adresse in mein Handy oder am Laptop eingebe bekomme ich: Netzwerk Zeitüberschreitung
Auch wenn ich die Ip in der Konsole anpinge kommt: Zeitüberschreitung der Anforderung.

Unser Netzwerkaufbau:

Laptop (IP 192.168.0.153) * * * * * *WLAN * * (IP im WLAN 192.168.0.153)
| *
LAN *
| *
Außen --- Router (IP192.168.0.50)------ LAN ------- UniFi Access Point * * * * * * * WLAN * MKR1000 IP(192.168.0.165)
Router Sicht: 192.168.0.154 -
Am Accespoint angezeigte gateway IP: 192.168.1.1

Welche IP muss ich Aufrufen wenn ich auf die Seite vom MKR1000 kommen will ?

Habe schon vieles Probiert auch mit fester IP adresse - geht auch nicht ?

Hat jemand eine Idee ?

Danke schon im Vorraus

Grüße Simon

Irgendwie passt die gateway IP: 192.168.1.1 nicht in Deine sonstige IP-Landschaft von 192.168.0.xxx

Gruß Tommy

Das ist mir auch schon aufgefallen -- mal schauen ob sich da was machen lässt

Danke

Welche IP erhält ein PC der sich über WLan anmeldet ?

@ HotSystems:

IPv4-Adresse . . . . . . . . . . : 192.168.0.158
Standardgateway . . . . . . . . . : 192.168.0.50
Subnetzmaske . . . . . . . . . . : 255.255.255.0

simoduino:
@ HotSystems:

IPv4-Adresse . . . . . . . . . . : 192.168.0.158
Standardgateway . . . . . . . . . : 192.168.0.50
Subnetzmaske . . . . . . . . . . : 255.255.255.0

Und wie kommst du dann auf die merkwürdige Gateway-IP von 192.168.1.1 ?

Keine Ahnung die wird in den Einstellungen des UniFi Access Point angezeigt, aber anscheinend werden alle ip Adressen über den router im keller verteilt...

Kannst du denn dem MKR mal eine Adresse in dem Netz, also 192.168.1.x vergeben ?

Habe mein Programm mal so geändert....

/*
  WiFi Web Server LED Blink

 A simple web server that lets you blink an LED via the web.
 This sketch will print the IP address of your WiFi Shield (once connected)
 to the Serial monitor. From there, you can open that address in a web browser
 to turn on and off the LED on pin 9.

 If the IP address of your shield is yourAddress:
 http://yourAddress/H turns the LED on
 http://yourAddress/L turns it off

 This example is written for a network using WPA encryption. For
 WEP or WPA, change the WiFi.begin() call accordingly.

 Circuit:
 * WiFi shield attached
 * LED attached to pin 9

 created 25 Nov 2012
 by Tom Igoe
 */
#include <SPI.h>
#include <WiFi101.h>

#include "arduino_secrets.h" 
///////please enter your sensitive data in the Secret tab/arduino_secrets.h
char ssid[] = SECRET_SSID;        // your network SSID (name)
char pass[] = SECRET_PASS;    // your network password (use for WPA, or use as key for WEP)
int keyIndex = 0;                 // your network key Index number (needed only for WEP)

int status = WL_IDLE_STATUS;
WiFiServer server(80);

byte mac[6];                     // the MAC address of your Wifi shield

  

void setup() {
  Serial.begin(9600);      // initialize serial communication
  pinMode(9, OUTPUT);      // set the LED pin mode

  // check for the presence of the shield:
  if (WiFi.status() == WL_NO_SHIELD) {
    Serial.println("WiFi shield not present");
    while (true);       // don't continue
  }
  IPAddress ip(192, 168, 1, 148);
  IPAddress gateway(192, 168, 1, 1);
  IPAddress subnet(255, 255, 249, 0);
  IPAddress dns(192, 168, 0, 50);
  //WiFi.config(ip, dns, gateway, subnet);
  WiFi.config(ip);
 
  // attempt to connect to WiFi network:
  while ( status != WL_CONNECTED) {
    Serial.print("Attempting to connect to Network named: ");
    Serial.println(ssid);                   // print the network name (SSID);

    // Connect to WPA/WPA2 network. Change this line if using open or WEP network:
    status = WiFi.begin(ssid, pass);
    // wait 5 seconds for connection:
    delay(5000);
  }
  server.begin();                           // start the web server on port 80
  printWiFiStatus();                        // you're connected now, so print out the status
}


void loop() {
  WiFiClient client = server.available();   // listen for incoming clients

  if (client) {                             // if you get a client,
    Serial.println("new client");           // print a message out the serial port
    String currentLine = "";                // make a String to hold incoming data from the client
    while (client.connected()) {            // loop while the client's connected
      if (client.available()) {             // if there's bytes to read from the client,
        char c = client.read();             // read a byte, then
        Serial.write(c);                    // print it out the serial monitor
        if (c == '\n') {                    // if the byte is a newline character

          // if the current line is blank, you got two newline characters in a row.
          // that's the end of the client HTTP request, so send a response:
          if (currentLine.length() == 0) {
            // HTTP headers always start with a response code (e.g. HTTP/1.1 200 OK)
            // and a content-type so the client knows what's coming, then a blank line:
            client.println("HTTP/1.1 200 OK");
            client.println("Content-type:text/html");
            client.println();

            // the content of the HTTP response follows the header:
            client.print("Click <a href=\"/H\">here</a> turn the LED on pin 9 on
");
            client.print("Click <a href=\"/L\">here</a> turn the LED on pin 9 off
");

            // The HTTP response ends with another blank line:
            client.println();
            // break out of the while loop:
            break;
          }
          else {      // if you got a newline, then clear currentLine:
            currentLine = "";
          }
        }
        else if (c != '\r') {    // if you got anything else but a carriage return character,
          currentLine += c;      // add it to the end of the currentLine
        }

        // Check to see if the client request was "GET /H" or "GET /L":
        if (currentLine.endsWith("GET /H")) {
          digitalWrite(9, HIGH);               // GET /H turns the LED on
        }
        if (currentLine.endsWith("GET /L")) {
          digitalWrite(9, LOW);                // GET /L turns the LED off
        }
      }
    }
    // close the connection:
    client.stop();
    Serial.println("client disonnected");
  }


  
}

void printWiFiStatus() {
  // print the SSID of the network you're attached to:
  Serial.print("SSID: ");
  Serial.println(WiFi.SSID());

  // print your WiFi shield's IP address:
  IPAddress ip = WiFi.localIP();
  Serial.print("IP Address: ");
  Serial.println(ip);
  IPAddress subnet;
   IPAddress gateway;
   subnet = WiFi.subnetMask();
    Serial.print("NETMASK: ");
    Serial.println(subnet);
     gateway = WiFi.gatewayIP();
  Serial.print("GATEWAY: ");
  Serial.println(gateway);

  WiFi.macAddress(mac);
  Serial.print("MAC: ");
  Serial.print(mac[5],HEX);
  Serial.print(":");
  Serial.print(mac[4],HEX);
  Serial.print(":");
  Serial.print(mac[3],HEX);
  Serial.print(":");
  Serial.print(mac[2],HEX);
  Serial.print(":");
  Serial.print(mac[1],HEX);
  Serial.print(":");
  Serial.println(mac[0],HEX);

  // print the received signal strength:
  long rssi = WiFi.RSSI();
  Serial.print("signal strength (RSSI):");
  Serial.print(rssi);
  Serial.println(" dBm");
  // print where to go in a browser:
  Serial.print("To see this page in action, open a browser to http://");
  Serial.println(ip);
}

Ausgabe:

SSID: Gast
IP Address: 192.168.1.148
NETMASK: 0.0.0.0
GATEWAY: 0.0.0.0
MAC: F8:F0:5:EC:92:F3
signal strength (RSSI):-80 dBm
To see this page in action, open a browser to http://192.168.1.148

Muss ich dns, gateway und subnet auch vergeben wenn ja was sollte ich da eintragen ?

So bekomme ich immer noch keine Verbindung

Güße

Guten Morgen,

Habe es gerade hinbekommen ! :smiley:

Anscheinend lag es daran, dass das WLAN mit dem ich den MKR1000 Verbunden hatte als GastWLAN definiert war.
Hab ihn mal mit unserem HauptWLAN verbinden lassen ohne Gast und so hat es geklappt...

Trozdem vielen Dank für die Antworten !

Viele Grüße Simon