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		<title>Setting Up a Raspberry Pi Wi-Fi Repeater &#8211; Scene 4: IP Forwarding &#038; Access Point</title>
		<link>https://www.NeuralLantern.com/setting-up-a-raspberry-pi-wi-fi-repeater-scene-4-ip-forwarding-access-point/</link>
					<comments>https://www.NeuralLantern.com/setting-up-a-raspberry-pi-wi-fi-repeater-scene-4-ip-forwarding-access-point/#respond</comments>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[mike]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Mon, 29 Sep 2025 11:02:17 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[Computer Science]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Networking]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Raspberry Pi]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Videos]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[DIY Networking]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Firewall Setup]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[IP Forwarding]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[IP Masquerading]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[iptables]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Network Configuration]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Network Manager]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Networking Tutorial]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Raspberry Pi projects]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[tcpdump]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[tech tutorial]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Wi-Fi Access Point]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Wi-Fi repeater]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Wireless LAN]]></category>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">https://www.NeuralLantern.com/?p=234</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[<p>Set up a Raspberry Pi Wi-Fi repeater with IP forwarding &#038; access point configuration. Step-by-step guide for network extension. #RaspberryPi #WiFiRepeater</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://www.NeuralLantern.com/setting-up-a-raspberry-pi-wi-fi-repeater-scene-4-ip-forwarding-access-point/">Setting Up a Raspberry Pi Wi-Fi Repeater &#8211; Scene 4: IP Forwarding &amp; Access Point</a> appeared first on <a href="https://www.NeuralLantern.com">NeuralLantern.com</a>.</p>
]]></description>
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<p>In Scene 4 of our Raspberry Pi Wi-Fi Repeater series, we dive into setting up IP forwarding, installing a firewall with iptables, and configuring a Wi-Fi access point. Learn how to forward packets, set up IP masquerading, and debug with tcpdump. Perfect for tech enthusiasts looking to extend their network range! Subscribe for more step-by-step tutorials and check out our website for additional resources. #RaspberryPi #WiFiRepeater #Networking #TechTutorial</p>



<p>New Scene Introduction 00:00:00<br>Video Editing for Recording Time 00:00:04<br>Camera Battery Concern 00:00:10<br>IP Forwarding Setup 00:00:12<br>IP Forwarding Explanation 00:00:34<br>Configuration File Access 00:01:24<br>Editing System Control File 00:01:40<br>Enabling IP Forwarding 00:02:03<br>Firewall Installation 00:02:40<br>IP Tables Installation 00:03:04<br>IP Masquerading Setup 00:03:33<br>IP Tables Rules Configuration 00:03:49<br>Making Firewall Rules Persistent 00:05:03<br>Access Point Setup Introduction 00:06:11<br>Network Manager Configuration 00:06:32<br>Setting SSID and Password 00:07:14<br>Wireless Security Settings 00:08:24<br>IP Address Configuration 00:10:17<br>Verifying Connection Settings 00:11:43<br>Debugging with TCP Dump 00:12:32<br>Installing TCP Dump 00:13:39<br>Monitoring Network Interfaces 00:14:00<br>SSH Debugging Shortcut 00:15:24<br>Testing Access Point 00:16:48<br>Virtual Machine Testing 00:17:02<br>Call to Subscribe 00:17:44<br>QR Code and Website Promotion 00:18:21</p>



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<p>Okay, we&#8217;ve started a new scene here.</p>



<p>I just cut the video.</p>



<p>I edited it a little bit so that we could, so that I could have more recording time before</p>



<p>the camera dies.</p>



<p>The camera is going to take a poop.</p>



<p>Anyway, so next we need to set up IP forwarding because what&#8217;s going to really happen is when</p>



<p>you send a request, let me see if I can find that image real fast.</p>



<p>Where the heck is that?</p>



<p>No, I&#8217;m not.</p>



<p>It&#8217;s right here.</p>



<p>So this is the after image.</p>



<p>image. So if you think about it, what&#8217;s going to happen is when your clients send a signal,</p>



<p>you know, to the Pi, the Pi is not the internet, the Pi is just connected to your router.</p>



<p>The Pi then needs to forward the data, the packets, whatever to its other interface. So</p>



<p>this is like, you know, wireless LAN one, and this is like wireless LAN zero, if you recall.</p>



<p>ability to forward packets between interfaces so that we can get the packets to wireless LAN</p>



<p>zero and then they&#8217;ll eventually end up being sent to the router. So that&#8217;s the basic idea of</p>



<p>what we&#8217;re doing now. And then also IP masquerading. So I&#8217;m going to close this and then go back to</p>



<p>Let&#8217;s see. So there&#8217;s a configuration file called system control in the etc directory.</p>



<p>So we can do cat system control dot configuration.</p>



<p>A lot of its stuff is a braid out or I guess like not configured by default.</p>



<p>So if we edit it, what&#8217;s going on there?</p>



<p>Dude, what is happening?</p>



<p>You see that?</p>



<p>Oh, I did pseudo nano, pseudo nano.</p>



<p>That was dumb.</p>



<p>So a lot of these options are just they&#8217;re commented out.</p>



<p>You know, they&#8217;re not like enabled.</p>



<p>commented out you know they&#8217;re not like enabled so this is a good idea for security purposes but</p>



<p>we definitely need to forward so</p>



<p>i&#8217;m going to uncomment net.ipv4.ip forward equals one to enable ipv ip forwarding on ipv4 and then</p>



<p>i&#8217;m going to uncomment the next one for ipv6 forwarding even though no word even though we&#8217;re</p>



<p>It&#8217;ll be a pain in the butt if you start trying to set up IPv6 on your own later and you forget to come back to this file.</p>



<p>So that&#8217;s what I&#8217;m going to do.</p>



<p>So we can immediately apply the changes with this command if we want to.</p>



<p>I&#8217;m just going to put it on the screen real fast.</p>



<p>But we don&#8217;t need to because I&#8217;m going to do a reboot after we set this up.</p>



<p>So the next thing we need is we actually need to install a firewall so that we can keep persistent firewall rules</p>



<p>that will help us IP masquerade. At least this is the way I know how to do it. So by default,</p>



<p>this operating system doesn&#8217;t actually have IP tables installed. The pie is totally open and</p>



<p>unprotected. Kind of weird, but okay. So I&#8217;m going to go sudo apt install IP tables so I can get a</p>



<p>firewall. And then I&#8217;m going to install install IP tables persistence. Actually, let&#8217;s do persistent</p>



<p>later so that we don&#8217;t have to do any other commands. When you install persistent, it&#8217;ll</p>



<p>it&#8217;ll grab whatever&#8217;s already in there and just make it persistent so you don&#8217;t</p>



<p>even have to remember extra commands if you&#8217;re wondering why we&#8217;re installing a</p>



<p>firewall at this point it&#8217;s not necessarily to protect the PI although</p>



<p>we can use that to protect the PI pretty soon or like later but it&#8217;s really so</p>



<p>that we can have masquerading work which is in this case it&#8217;s very closely</p>



<p>related to forwarding data from the two network adapters so I&#8217;m gonna go so we</p>



<p>installed iptables I&#8217;m going to say iptables list all the rules are empty everything is open the</p>



<p>firewall is really letting everything through so then I&#8217;m going to do sudo iptables network</p>



<p>address translation post routing if the source is coming from oh yeah if the source is coming</p>



<p>from your access point and it&#8217;s trying to go out to the to the ethernet adapter that&#8217;s wrong that&#8217;s</p>



<p>that&#8217;s wrong that&#8217;s not going to work for our purposes eventually</p>



<p>we&#8217;ll say the judgment is that it&#8217;s okay to masquerade</p>



<p>um we should replace this with wireless LAN zero also so that they both work</p>



<p>basic idea is if a client of the pi access point is sending information into the pi like it&#8217;s it&#8217;s</p>



<p>making a web request then we&#8217;re saying it&#8217;s okay to masquerade as that ip address as we send the</p>



<p>as that IP address as we send the data along to either the ethernet port or the wireless LAN port.</p>



<p>So I put both of those in there because I want it to work for both.</p>



<p>You may only need to put wireless LAN 0 or whatever your adapter is</p>



<p>for the one that&#8217;s making the primary connection to the original router.</p>



<p>So now let&#8217;s make the rules permanent with IP tables save.</p>



<p>Oh wait, no, we don&#8217;t even necessarily need to use save if we just install persistent</p>



<p>after we did it.</p>



<p>Whoops.</p>



<p>App install persistent because I think it&#8217;ll ask us if we want to save the rules right</p>



<p>now.</p>



<p>Yeah, right.</p>



<p>Okay.</p>



<p>So I&#8217;m going to say, yeah, so I can save myself some commands.</p>



<p>Yeah, go ahead and save them.</p>



<p>If you installed persistence right away, you could either uninstall them and then reinstall</p>



<p>them, I guess.</p>



<p>the command is basically this to take whatever rules are currently inside of iptables and then</p>



<p>just send them into that saved rules file and then you would do the same thing for the v6 if</p>



<p>you wanted ipv6 double check what has been saved with this command so we&#8217;ll say sudo cat and then</p>



<p>that&#8217;s the file where the rules are saved so it&#8217;s telling me yeah they are saved so if i reboot the</p>



<p>rules should still be there now. And then we have enough time to set up the access point.</p>



<p>We are very, very, very close. Yeah, it&#8217;s probably actually going to work now.</p>



<p>Set up the access point. And</p>



<p>yeah, I&#8217;ll show you how to do a debug thing after this. I&#8217;m not going to do it</p>



<p>so you can see, but I&#8217;ll show you how to do it. Anyway, so let&#8217;s set up the access point. Remember,</p>



<p>access point. Remember, we&#8217;re only connected with one of the radios right now. So pseudo network</p>



<p>manager, command line interface connection show, and we&#8217;re only connected as a client. So now we</p>



<p>need to do this pseudo network manager command line interface connection add not device Wi Fi</p>



<p>connect, but connection add, the type is going to be Wi Fi. And then we&#8217;re going to specify the</p>



<p>interface name as wireless LAN one, that&#8217;s the dongle that we installed earlier. And then we&#8217;re</p>



<p>so that&#8217;s mode AP and then I&#8217;m just gonna set the connection name to become</p>



<p>access points you can obviously set this to whatever you want it doesn&#8217;t really</p>



<p>matter and then we have to set the SSID probably this should be different than</p>



<p>your main router because we&#8217;re not doing like WDS you know roaming access points</p>



<p>or anything like that this is gonna be a totally separate access point with a</p>



<p>totally separate network we&#8217;re just gonna eventually make it work so that we</p>



<p>seamlessly so that it&#8217;ll feel like one network but it&#8217;s technically another</p>



<p>subnet at least so choose something for your SSID that your neighbors won&#8217;t call</p>



<p>the police about I&#8217;m gonna do well la de fricking and then we&#8217;ll set a password</p>



<p>so I&#8217;m gonna just make up a random password right now in another window and</p>



<p>This thing is not working.</p>



<p>Hello?</p>



<p>Okay, I&#8217;m just going to copy paste a random password.</p>



<p>So I&#8217;ll set the, let&#8217;s see, what is it?</p>



<p>80211 wireless security.</p>



<p>Oh, you know what?</p>



<p>It&#8217;s probably easier if I just do this from inside network manager.</p>



<p>So I added the connection.</p>



<p>The SSID is well loudy freaking dot.</p>



<p>Then I can just kind of show the connections become access point is not up yet.</p>



<p>So I&#8217;m going to edit it.</p>



<p>Connection edit become access points.</p>



<p>So now it&#8217;s, I don&#8217;t know, for me, it&#8217;s a little bit easier to edit all these things.</p>



<p>So I&#8217;m going to do set 802.11.</p>



<p>is kind of like you know the wireless family of standards dot band oh for the band depending on</p>



<p>your dongle uh you might want 2.4 gigahertz or 5 gigahertz also depending on your country</p>



<p>for me i&#8217;m gonna try to get this on 5 gigahertz so that is band a uh i think the other band is either</p>



<p>actually you know what network manager will tell me yeah bg i was gonna say just g by itself yeah</p>



<p>gigahertz at least for this then I&#8217;m going to do set the wireless security property of the key</p>



<p>management and I&#8217;m going to set it to basically a pass pass key or like a pass phrase some of</p>



<p>these settings are probably going to be out of date by the time you watch this video so you might</p>



<p>want to go look up the latest or ask me a million times to provide an updated video I guess although</p>



<p>kind of kind of over it to be honest i hope this works for everybody because regardless i&#8217;m eating</p>



<p>an entire pizza by myself when this is finished let&#8217;s see group let&#8217;s see proto group pairwise</p>



<p>um so we&#8217;re just type we&#8217;re just typing stuff now now psk so that&#8217;s the uh the password so then</p>



<p>i&#8217;m gonna paste the random password that i just came up with and then uh hit enter to get that</p>



<p>And then we&#8217;re going to set up the IP address.</p>



<p>Remember, this is another adapter.</p>



<p>We still need to set its IP address.</p>



<p>So IPv4.addresses,</p>



<p>I&#8217;ve got to do set, sorry.</p>



<p>Addresses 192.168.5.1, which is what we decided on.</p>



<p>And then block 24, yes to manual.</p>



<p>And then I&#8217;m going to set its gateway to nothing.</p>



<p>Oh, the gateway has to be empty.</p>



<p>I made this mistake earlier.</p>



<p>mistake earlier if you actually set the gateway to something like you probably want to do 192.168.1.1</p>



<p>if you do that then the access point will tell all of its clients that the gateway is 1.1</p>



<p>but the problem is they can&#8217;t actually access 1.1 so they&#8217;ll just be offline so you need to make</p>



<p>sure probably that the gateway is empty so we&#8217;ll do print ipv4 notice how the gateway is empty</p>



<p>DNS is empty DNS searches empty they all should just be empty because we want</p>



<p>the information to come from elsewhere at least on that on that so uh you know we want DNS mask to</p>



<p>tell them everything if those have values you can basically say remove ipv4 dot addresses and then</p>



<p>it should work so let&#8217;s see what else do I have to add addresses gateway DNS DNS search and then</p>



<p>11 wireless security just to double check it.</p>



<p>Make sure that you&#8217;ve entered all the right values</p>



<p>and then print the IPv4 block again just to double check it</p>



<p>and then hit save.</p>



<p>If you have an error here, you might want to type fix, verify,</p>



<p>or maybe just go look at all the settings again.</p>



<p>But I saved it.</p>



<p>It seems to have worked.</p>



<p>So I can now quit.</p>



<p>And then, oh, actually, maybe I should tell it to start automatically.</p>



<p>Let me just double check.</p>



<p>Print the connection properties.</p>



<p>properties. Does it say auto connect? Yes. Okay. So now the access point should automatically come</p>



<p>up whenever, uh, whenever the pie boots, if we&#8217;re lucky, we&#8217;re incredibly close right now.</p>



<p>So I&#8217;m going to do, I&#8217;m going to open up another window and I just want you to kind of see what&#8217;s,</p>



<p>what&#8217;s going on here. Um, or how I was debugging my connection. Cause in the beginning, when I was</p>



<p>first learning how to do this, I was like, where are the packets going? Is it even trying?</p>



<p>trying so for me I made several windows like this if your terminal doesn&#8217;t split</p>



<p>windows too bad for you mine is called terminator you can find it pretty easily</p>



<p>it&#8217;s sudo apt install terminator but what I what you want to do is SSH into</p>



<p>the Ethernet of the PI three times so I&#8217;m gonna do that and then oh god is that</p>



<p>figured something out. So you want to do it three times and then you want to label each window.</p>



<p>So this window is going to be wireless LAN zero. Depending on your terminal, you might have to do</p>



<p>labeling differently. Wireless LAN one and then I&#8217;m going to do Ethernet zero on this one.</p>



<p>So they all, we have three terminals, one for each interface, network interface. And I&#8217;m basically</p>



<p>to watch packets on every single interface.</p>



<p>So inside of the Pi, I&#8217;m going to first say sudo apt install tcp dump.</p>



<p>That&#8217;s a special program that lets you watch packets as they&#8217;re traveling all around your</p>



<p>network cards and stuff like that.</p>



<p>So sudo apt install tcp dump.</p>



<p>Then the command is sudo tcp dump and then dash i to specify an interface.</p>



<p>And then we&#8217;ll specify ethernet zero here.</p>



<p>and then uh here we&#8217;ll specify wireless LAN zero we&#8217;ll just match the windows that&#8217;s why</p>



<p>i labeled the windows and then here we&#8217;ll do wireless LAN one uh and then so what you&#8217;ll</p>



<p>want to do is hit enter on each of these windows and you&#8217;ll see like a huge stream of data you want</p>



<p>to uh filter the data by something that&#8217;s useful for you otherwise it&#8217;ll be like way too much data</p>



<p>I filtered it by ICMP echo and then what I was doing is I was basically just pinging servers like</p>



<p>I was pinging inside of the Pi I was having it ping itself and then I was having it ping like</p>



<p>my router then I was trying to have it ping clients and then I was having the clients ping the Pi</p>



<p>and ping the router and then finally start pinging the internet you&#8217;re just doing pings all over the</p>



<p>place in order to try to narrow down what might be wrong with your situation if you follow this</p>



<p>tutorial probably it&#8217;ll be fine but like for me you know I like to debug and things were going</p>



<p>wrong when I was first learning this so this was super super helpful I just want you to know</p>



<p>here&#8217;s a problem though every time you reboot the pi let me do that right now you do sudo reboot</p>



<p>every time you reboot the pi you lose connection uh connections to all the other windows so then</p>



<p>you have to like log back into the pi and then type out the command all over again so instead a nice</p>



<p>Instead, a nice shortcut could be something like this.</p>



<p>SSH into the pie.</p>



<p>SSH pie at 192.168.1.123.</p>



<p>And then in quotes or single quotes,</p>



<p>I&#8217;m gonna do single quotes on the outside</p>



<p>and then double quotes on the inside</p>



<p>because you kind of have to use different quotes.</p>



<p>Now what&#8217;s gonna happen is when I go into the pie,</p>



<p>it&#8217;s gonna log into the pie</p>



<p>and immediately start doing the TCP dump for me.</p>



<p>that means when when I get booted I just have to I just have to hit the up arrow and I can</p>



<p>immediately go back into the pi and I don&#8217;t have to type out the commands again let me show you</p>



<p>real fast with a slightly different way so I&#8217;m going to go ssh pi at 192.168.1.123 and then do</p>



<p>a single quote and instead of doing tcp dump I&#8217;m just going to type echo by itself so notice how</p>



<p>I didn&#8217;t echo anything. Hello. It logs in, it prints hello, and then it logs out. So now</p>



<p>I&#8217;m kicked out of the Pi. Let&#8217;s pretend that we lost internet or network. I just hit the up arrow</p>



<p>and hit enter. So it&#8217;s like so fast. You don&#8217;t have to type all those letters again.</p>



<p>So I&#8217;m not going to debug here. I&#8217;ll do that in another window if I really need to, but</p>



<p>I just wanted you to know. And it&#8217;s fun. It&#8217;s fun to know when things are really starting to work.</p>



<p>probably rebooted. Now let&#8217;s try some, well, we know that the PI&#8217;s network works for itself. So</p>



<p>now the next step is how can we prove that this access point actually works? Oh my gosh.</p>



<p>I think I&#8217;m going to cut the video so that I can show you that it works</p>



<p>by logging into a virtual machine that&#8217;s inside of this virtual machine that I&#8217;m recording on.</p>



<p>It&#8217;s probably going to be super slow. We&#8217;ll see what happens. Okay. So I&#8217;m going to cut the scene</p>



<p>Okay, so I&#8217;m gonna cut the scene right now. When I come back, we&#8217;ll be logging into a virtual machine.</p>



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<p>and all that good stuff.</p>



<p>suggestion for uh uh clarifications or errata or just future videos that you want to see please</p>



<p>leave a comment or if you just want to say hey what&#8217;s up what&#8217;s going on you know just send me</p>



<p>a comment whatever i also wake up for those in the middle of the night i get i wake up in a cold</p>



<p>sweat and i&#8217;m like it would really it really mean the world to me i would really appreciate it so</p>



<p>again thank you so much for watching this video and um enjoy the cool music as as i fade into the</p>



<p>into the darkness which is coming for us all.</p>



<p>Thank you.</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://www.NeuralLantern.com/setting-up-a-raspberry-pi-wi-fi-repeater-scene-4-ip-forwarding-access-point/">Setting Up a Raspberry Pi Wi-Fi Repeater &#8211; Scene 4: IP Forwarding &amp; Access Point</a> appeared first on <a href="https://www.NeuralLantern.com">NeuralLantern.com</a>.</p>
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