Program That Manages Wireless Network Connections For Mac Os X

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You should now be able to connect to the network. OS X® Lion 10.7 / Mountain Lion 10.8 / Mavericks 10.9. Step 1: Click on the Apple icon, then select the System Preferences option. Step 2: Click Network in the System Preferences window. Step 3: Select Wi-Fi and click the Network Name drop-down menu to select a wireless network you want to connect to.

  1. Mac Wireless Network Setup

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This is a quick post about setting up a simple layer 2 network bridge using a Mac (in this case a 2011 Mac Mini) running OS X (Mavricks). My goal was to setup the Mac, henceforth referred to as the mini, as an access point for my main network. I found no resources on line that covered doing this so I decided to write it up for those are interested. What we’re not doing I found many posts online that covered setting up “Internet Sharing” with a Mac. Some of those referred to this as ‘bridging’ which it is not.

Mac Wireless Network Setup

At least, in it’s simplest form it is little more than Network Address Translation (NAT) with packets being forwarded from one interface to another. The problem with that approach is that only IP Traffic is passed and even that is adulterated such that clients on one side (the inside) of the link are not directly addressable by hosts on the other side (the outside) of the link.

It’s great for letting multiple machines browse the web but not good for having multiple machines talk to each other whether they’re plugged in at the switch or connecting over Wifi and pulling from a common DHCP pool of addresses. Configure Primary Interface Primary is conceptual here.

I’m taking about the interface that I’ll use to configure the host from over the network. The IP address for this interface will be the (main) address for this host. For me the primary interface is the ethernet port on the back of the Mini. Yours could be any of USB, BlueTooth, USB, FireWire, etc. We want to make sure that the interface is properly setup on the network. For you that may mean DHCP configuration, manually IP-ing it, or something else. I’m not going to spend time telling you how to do this.

Encrypting external hard drive for mac. You’ll know it’s working when you can ping something external to the box (preferably external to the network). In my case I set a static lease in my DHCP server so that every time the mac address for the Mini shows up it gets the same IP. The interface happens to be en0. Reboot and make sure it works on start up. Turn on Internet Sharing.

Hi there, thanks for the writeup. I was able to establish the bridge using the internal wired Ethernet en0 and an external USB-to-Ethernet adapter en4. En0 is the main connection to the network and en4 connects a single other device (Elgato Netstream 4Sat). The part that is working: The Netstream behind en4 gets a proper DHCP IP through the bridge. I can ping and access the Netstream from other devices in the network (e.g. IPad in the Wifi).

Mac

The part that is not working: I cannot ping or access the Netstream behind en4 from the Mac Mini itself that has the bridge configured on it. I assume this is related to the routes on the Mac.

Do you have any idea on this? Thanks, Torben. Many, many thanks for your help! I have been looking for this solution for a few years and yours seems to be the only place it exists. I do have a problem, though: I am using a mid-2007 iMac running Mavericks (10.9.4) and have implemented the steps above to create the bridge (but not the startup script.) My iPhone gets the same address as my iPad (10.0.1.2) using DHCP. I have set the en0 to static 10.0.1.6) and the Network Pref panel shows en1 with an IP of 169.254.186.16 - self-assigned. I can not see my iMac from my iPhone but can see my Apple TV (both via an airport attached to my cable modem and on the 10.0.1.x net.) I'm not a net expert by any means so I am stumped.

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Any help would be appreciated. I don't have your email address or I would attach the outputs mentioned above. Also, where would I put the start-up script? Cant get it working, the bridge interface appears with the 2 physical interfaces allocated.

Thanks for the post! I looked for some more background on having a Raspberry Pi connecting trough my Macbook to the internet. In fact, I was just looking for 'internet sharing' which I did not know. But the idea of creating a bridge from the command line sounds interesting. I saw some new entry in the output of 'ifconfig' after I enabled internet sharing.

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