Install Wifidog On Windows
Wifidog / wifidog-gateway. Pull requests 8. Projects 0 Wiki Insights Permalink. Windows user would not benefit from, or be able to correctly setup. [53]WiFiDog installation. If the software ever reaches a point of complete point-and-click ease: that we feel average users can safely administer, we will update this.
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Rule #6: Homework / Educational Questions must display effort. Rule #7: No Political Posts. I'm trying to develop a captive portal within our internet cafe software and would love to avoid using Linux.
But before I even think about developing, I need to think of how the network needs to be setup. Think Starbucks: It's important that the client not have to install any software or change their network settings Whatever website you login to, it'll redirect your browser to the 'captive portal' that logs you in and gives you internet (or, to keep it simple, even just an 'Agree' button without authentication and it'll keep them in for an hour or 2).
Y8. I'm more of a developer than a network guy, so let me know if I'm on track (need help, esp, on #3). Server name=SERVER, 192.168.1.25 Router, 192.168.1.1 1) WiFi router is connected by cable to Windows Server, DHCP server DISABLED 2) WinServer has DHCP server, so assigns private IP to WiFi client 3) What the heck do I do to force the client's TCP requests to redirect to my portal? Google keeps bringing me to proxy servers, but I thought the client had to configure the proxy server first?
How would I use a proxy server to redirect all traffic to my website? Or is there some sort of software firewall that works on the entire network? I'm so confused here how to implement this. 4) After the customer is redirected to my portal (IIS website), they click 'Agree', log in, then #3 gives them WAN privileges for x amount of a time. But what the heck is #3?