this post was submitted on 20 Jul 2024
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networking

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I haven't really done home networking since Windows XP / gnome only Ubuntu days, so rusty is an understatement.

Currently due to the layout of my apartment, I have my main PC in a bedroom connected to a gli.net Velica router, such then connects to the wall, which then connects to a TP-Link Switch (1), which is connected to the internet.

In the living room, where I want to stream to a Raspberry Pi that has Android TV (lineage os), I have the Pi and 2 Nintendo Switches connected to another TP-Link switch (2), which is then connected to another gli.net router, which connects to the wall and then to TP-Link switch (1) which is connected to internet.

How do I set up a local LAN network so that my computer can then stream to the Pi via Steam Link, Moonlight, Sunshine, or any other recommended option?

Layout

Bedroom

 • Wall connection (port 3)
 |
 ∆ Velica Router 2
 |
 § PC

Living Room

 • Wall connection (port 1)
 |
 ∆ Velica Router 1
 |
 × TP Link Switch 2
 |.               |.      |. 
π              ™ Nintendo Switch 1&2

Electrical Box

  • Port 1, Port 3
  |
  × TP Link Switch 1
  |
 🌐 Internet 
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[–] catloaf@lemm.ee 7 points 4 months ago

Networking hasn't fundamentally changed in decades, so your experience is not out of date.

I'm not sure why you have two routers, but you should only have one at the edge, then a switch feeding the wall ports, so that everything in the house is on the same subnet.

[–] CancerMancer@sh.itjust.works 3 points 4 months ago* (last edited 4 months ago)

Connect the internet connection directly to the router, then connect the router to the wall ports. If it doesn't have enough ports, connect the router to a TP-Link switch, and then the switch to the wall ports.

Wall port 3 only connects to one device (PC) so no further action needed.

Wall port 1 connects to 2 or more devices, so connect the wall port to a TP-Link switch and then from there to your Nintendo Switch docks and the Pi

After that unless you've done some weird configuration your gear will all be on the same subnet. You may want to manually assign the PC's IP address to make it easier to use streaming, but that's not mandatory.