Hello,
I support a network of around 75 machines. It's a simple AD structure w/ one domain and a single DHCP server on one of the DCs.
Every now and then I'll get a user call me saying they've got the "Windows has detected an IP address conflict" error message in their screen. Typically, I'll go through ipconfig over the phone w/ the user, create what amounts to a null reservation in the DHCP scope so that way no one gets that address again, and then we ipconfig /renew (oh, ipconfig /release then ipconfig /renew renews with the same offending IP address, go figure).
I've run dhcploc on the network, only one DHCP server is responding. I'm the only network admin and my users don't know how to hard code IP addresses.
This typically happens over a wireless connection with Dell laptops, not sure if Dell is the culprit or just coincidence since it's all we have in the laptop arena.
Another workaround is to have the users disable their wireless adapter and then hardwire into the network. This is another way to work around it.
With over 75 machines and only one of me, visiting each workstation to see network settings isn't really an option.
The odd thing is when I turn off a laptop that's claiming to have a duplicate IP address, you'd think I could ping the address and get a response from the other machine on the wire that allegedly has that IP already. This is not the case. Pings in this instance always return unanswered. Additionally, I never get two people calling with this error, just one.
I'm stumped. Any ideas?
There is a Linksys AP on the wire, but it doesn't have a DHCP server. There is also a Linksys WRT54G on the wire, but it's DHCP server is disabled. This error also happened before I installed the WRT54G.
I support a network of around 75 machines. It's a simple AD structure w/ one domain and a single DHCP server on one of the DCs.
Every now and then I'll get a user call me saying they've got the "Windows has detected an IP address conflict" error message in their screen. Typically, I'll go through ipconfig over the phone w/ the user, create what amounts to a null reservation in the DHCP scope so that way no one gets that address again, and then we ipconfig /renew (oh, ipconfig /release then ipconfig /renew renews with the same offending IP address, go figure).
I've run dhcploc on the network, only one DHCP server is responding. I'm the only network admin and my users don't know how to hard code IP addresses.
This typically happens over a wireless connection with Dell laptops, not sure if Dell is the culprit or just coincidence since it's all we have in the laptop arena.
Another workaround is to have the users disable their wireless adapter and then hardwire into the network. This is another way to work around it.
With over 75 machines and only one of me, visiting each workstation to see network settings isn't really an option.
The odd thing is when I turn off a laptop that's claiming to have a duplicate IP address, you'd think I could ping the address and get a response from the other machine on the wire that allegedly has that IP already. This is not the case. Pings in this instance always return unanswered. Additionally, I never get two people calling with this error, just one.
I'm stumped. Any ideas?
There is a Linksys AP on the wire, but it doesn't have a DHCP server. There is also a Linksys WRT54G on the wire, but it's DHCP server is disabled. This error also happened before I installed the WRT54G.