MedingMedina Lv2Posted 15 Jan 2023 23:38
  
The bridge mode does not terminate the traffic at the gateway while the IP passthrough does terminate the traffic at the gateway.
Naomi Lv3Posted 15 Jan 2023 23:37
  
The ony difference is that the transmission in pass-through is ended at the gateway.
RegiBoy Lv5Posted 15 Jan 2023 23:32
  
IP pass-through functions similarly to bridged mode, in which you can utilize your own router behind the ISP-provided gateway. However, in IP pass-through mode, the transmission is ended at the gateway (the bridge mode signal is not terminated), allowing the ISP to connect to the gateway using its own IP. The traffic will still transit via the gateway, and your router will be issued the ISP-provided public IP address.
CyberDaeng Lv1Posted 15 Jan 2023 22:03
  
IP pass-through works essentially the same as the bridged mode where you can use your own router behind the ISP-provided gateway. However, in IP pass-through mode the signal is terminated (bridge mode signal is not terminated) at the gateway and allows the ISP to connect to the gateway with its own IP. The traffic will still pass-though the gateway, and the ISP-provided public IP address will be assigned to your router.
rivsy Lv5Posted 15 Jan 2023 12:48
  
The bridge mode and IP passthrough mode both provide similar functionality where entire traffic is pass-through the gateway and the public IP is assigned to the client router behind the gateway. The bridge mode does not terminate the traffic at the gateway while the IP passthrough does terminate the traffic at the gateway. In order for ISPs to connect to the gateway, the IP passthrough mode should be used instead of the bridge mode.

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