Exactly why I'm confused as to why you're so specific with the IP addresses. I should be able to set it to anything that is not already taken by another device, correct?
Hi
@Chesse did you get this sorted? What you are trying to do is perfectly feasible. I'm going to make some assumptions here since some details are absent.
I'm going to assume that your wireless interface on your PC is
NOT in the same 192.168.
0.0/24 subnet. If it is then you need to change the IP address of your Wired PC interface and that of your FreeNAS interface to another network (lets say 10.0.10.0/24 just to be safe as most home routers i've used don't use this range by default).
So, again, assuming your wireless interface on your PC is something like 192.168.
1.X we shouldn't have a problem.
You already have your FreeNAS box setup as 192.168.0.137 Subnet mask 255.255.255.0. Set the wired interface on your PC to 192.168.0.136, do
not add a default gateway for this.
You should be able to access the FreeNAS GUI after completing the above.
If not and assuming this PC is a windows PC, I don't know if Windows is clever enough to automatically add routes to different networks based on adding another network to an attached interface (happy to be confirmed by someone who knows what they are talking about).
So if after the above, you you still cant access we need to tell the PC that to reach any address in the 192.168.0.0/24 range that it needs to send the traffic out the interface belonging to that network. 192.168.0.136 in this case. To do that open a command prompt as administrator and add a static route:
route ADD 192.168.0.0 MASK 255.255.255.0 192.168.0.136
This will tell Windows to send all traffic destined for the 192.168.0.0/24 network out the interface with the 192.168.0.136 address.
All other traffic will go out your default gateway to your wireless router.
Hope the above didn't patronise in any way. Hard to know who knows what :)