Assign a static IP address to your computer (more specifically, to
the network card that's plugged into the Netgear router).
+
For this example, we'll assume that your network interface is `eth0`.
-First, we have to assign a static IP address to our network interface:
+First, we have to assign a static IP address to our network interface.
+In this example, we'll use `192.168.1.2`. All available network interfaces
+can be listed using
````
-$ sudo ifconfig eth0 192.168.1.2
+$ nmrp-flash -L
+eth0 192.168.1.2 f2:11:a1:02:03:b1
````
Now we can start `nmrp-flash`. The argument for the `-a` option needs
can usually be downloaded directly from Netgear's FTP servers.
````
-$ sudo nmrp-flash -i eth0 -a 192.168.1.254 -f EX2700-V1.0.1.8.img
+$ nmrp-flash -i eth0 -a 192.168.1.254 -f EX2700-V1.0.1.8.img
Advertising NMRP server on eth0 ... /
-Received configuration request from XX:XX:XX:XX:XX:XX.
+Received configuration request from a4:2b:8c:00:00:01.
Sending configuration: ip 192.168.1.254, mask 255.255.255.0.
Uploading EX2700-V1.0.1.8.img ... OK
Waiting for remote to respond.
### Building and installing
-Linux only for now, sorry!
-
````
$ make && sudo make install
````