The IP Office system acts as the default gateway for its DHCP clients. You can also specify the IP Office as the default gateway statically addressed devices on the same subnet as the IP Office. When those clients and devices want to send data to an IP address on a different subnet, they will send that data to the IP Office system for onward routing.
IPv4 Static Routes
For IPv4 traffic, the IP Office can use the configuration settings to determine where to forward traffic. You can configure the following as destinations for IP Office static routes:
LAN1 - Direct the traffic to the IP Office system LAN1.
LAN2 - Direct the traffic to the IP Office system LAN2.
Service - Direct the traffic to a service in the IP Office configuration. The service settings define the details to connect to a remote data service.
Tunnel - Direct the traffic to an IPSec or L2TP tunnel in the IP Office configuration.
The IP Office system provides two methods of defining a default route for IP traffic that does not match any other specified routes.
Default Service - Within the settings for services, one service can be set as the Default Route (Service | Service).
Default IP Route - Create an IP Route record with a blank IP Address, blank IP Mask, and set to the required destination for default traffic.
IPv6 Static Routes
Linux-based IP Office R12.1 systems can support IPv6. In that case, you can configure static routes for IPv6 traffic using the configuration settings.
IPv4 Dynamic Routes (RIP)
IP500 V2 IP Office systems can support RIP (Routing Information Protocol). The IP Office can use RIP to automatically learn routes for data traffic from other routers that also support RIP.