Background: I have enabled IIS 5.0 services on an existing Win2K Advanced server. I created and configured a website using the new website wizard giving it a name and separate ip address along the way. The server has 2 NICs and tcp/ip is the only transport protocol. IP Properties of NIC #1 has the static address of the server. IP properties of NIC #2 has the static ip address of the web root - note this previously dormant NIC was enabled during the website setup process.
I can successfully ping, resolve and tracert the server and website (internal only) by name and ip address from anywhere on our network with no problems. The web-based application also works fine BUT since setting this up I've been seeing event log error 4319 messages from NetBT to the effect that a duplicate name has been detected on the TCP network (as reported by one of our DNS/WINS servers - these services are not enabled on my server). nbtstat -n shows, amongst other things, the following lines for each adapter in the server:
SERVERNAME <03> UNIQUE Registered
SERVERNAME$ <03> UNIQUE Registered
What have I missed/done wrong and how can it be fixed?
Cheers!
![[morning] [morning] [morning]](/data/assets/smilies/morning.gif)
Darts
"Today is the tomorrow you worried about yesterday" -- Dale Carnegie.
I can successfully ping, resolve and tracert the server and website (internal only) by name and ip address from anywhere on our network with no problems. The web-based application also works fine BUT since setting this up I've been seeing event log error 4319 messages from NetBT to the effect that a duplicate name has been detected on the TCP network (as reported by one of our DNS/WINS servers - these services are not enabled on my server). nbtstat -n shows, amongst other things, the following lines for each adapter in the server:
SERVERNAME <03> UNIQUE Registered
SERVERNAME$ <03> UNIQUE Registered
What have I missed/done wrong and how can it be fixed?
Cheers!
![[morning] [morning] [morning]](/data/assets/smilies/morning.gif)
Darts
"Today is the tomorrow you worried about yesterday" -- Dale Carnegie.