If on this same hardware I install eg. Linux the PC accepts the offered
IP address from the DHCP server. Imho this rules out a DHCP server
misconfiguration and hardware failure. The IP address assigned is in the
(172.x.x.x) range. On an other computer also installing Vista I see the
same behaviour. On the dhcp server log I see a DHCP request, a DHCP
offer, but no DHCP ack if vista is installed.
If I switch the hardware to a network with public IP addresses and I
install Vista, the system nicely accepts an IP address from the DHCP
server. This rules out hardware/software failure in Vista imho.
My conclusion is that Vista refuses DHCP offers in the private IP
ranges. Has anyone seen this too.
My question is how can I have Vista accept IP addresses in the private
range??
Regards, Koos.
"Nieuwslezer" <nieuw...@nieuws.nl> wrote in message
news:aYudnQSXveRZhFLY...@zeelandnet.nl...
Koos.
"Nieuwslezer" <nieuw...@nieuws.nl> wrote in message
news:aYudnQSXveRZhFLY...@zeelandnet.nl...
Try changing the subnet mask to 255.255.0.0 and also 255.255.255.0 to see if
it's a subnet problem. What DHCP server are you using?
--
Kerry Brown
Microsoft MVP - Shell/User
http://www.vistahelp.ca
At the moment I am reconfiguring the privat network to see if the
standard netmask will work. I believe in the 172.16.x.x range the
"official" netmask is 255.255.0.0. Is this correct???
Koos.
--
Kerry Brown
Microsoft MVP - Shell/User
http://www.vistahelp.ca
"Nieuwslezer" <nieuw...@nieuws.nl> wrote in message
news:PpWdnX9TbdxR0VLY...@zeelandnet.nl...
I quess I have to make a temporary network in the 192.168.x.x or
10.x.x.x series and see what happens.
Is there anyone out here who uses Vista with DHCP on a 172.16.x.x net??
What are your experiences??
Koos.
Kerry Brown wrote:
> That's correct.
>
--
Kerry Brown
Microsoft MVP - Shell/User
http://www.vistahelp.ca
"A.J. Werkman" <""AJ(dot)werkman(\"@)digifarma(dot)nl"> wrote in message
news:zvGdneoY1OAJH1LY...@zeelandnet.nl...
I put my Vista PC behind a linksys router that hands out IP's in the
range 192.168.1.100/255.255.255.0. Now Vista accepts a IP from the router.
Build up a testlab environment consisting of a linux router with the
ecternal NIC connected to a public IP and internally handing out IP's in
the 192.168.1.100/255.255.255.0 range. Vista does not accept the IP
address here. I use a linux configuration identical to the one described
in my previous message, that is on the public IP net where Vista does
accept a DHCP IP address from the dhcp server. Both routers run dhcpd
3.0.3-28 on Fedora Core 5.
This drives me crazy. One finding makes me think, the problem is in the
dhcp configuration, the other that the problem is in the vista client.
I'll go on testing, I would't mind some help on this issue!!
--
Kerry Brown
Microsoft MVP - Shell/User
http://www.vistahelp.ca
"A.J. Werkman" <""AJ(dot)werkman(\"@)digifarma(dot)nl"> wrote in message
news:Nr2dnWC0KJGWsk3Y...@zeelandnet.nl...
Firewall problems don't look to me as the source of the problem, because
in a setting where public IP addresses are handed out the DHCP
addresses are accepted by Vista.
The only thing that is consistend with all my data, is that Vista
refuses a dhcp address when there is no direct internet connectivity. I
have my private networks behind routers that do not forward IP packets
and don't have NAT. The linksys router however is configured to do NAT
and therefor is able to reach the outside world. And vista accepts
192.168.1.100 from the linksys router.
I can not see the direct logic in this, because in the process of
getting a dhcp address an OS is not able to communicate outside the
local area network and should not be interested in the outside world at
that stage. But this assumption fits. On the other hand I don't see
cross-network trafic during the dhcp process.
I will look into the vista firewalling.
Can anyone tell me if and how I can follow the DHCP process in Vista?
Can the DHCP process be debugged??
Koos.
Network Monitor 3.0 supports Vista and should help with seeing what is
actually happening from Vista's point of view.
http://blogs.technet.com/netmon/archive/2006/11/22/network-monitor-3-0-has-released.aspx
Capture packets from the Linux DHCP server and from the Vista computer and
compare them. You may also want to capture a successful session with the
Linksys router and compare the DHCP offer packets.
--
Kerry Brown
Microsoft MVP - Shell/User
http://www.vistahelp.ca
"A.J. Werkman" <""AJ(dot)werkman(\"@)digifarma(dot)nl"> wrote in message
news:2ZmdnQ7FC98...@zeelandnet.nl...
I build up a testlab consisting of a linux PC that functions as router
and dhcp server. I installed Fedora core 5 out of the box. I defined my
network as 192.168.1.0/24. I configured the dhcp server to hand out ip
addresses in the range 192.168.1.100-192.168.1.200.
After that I started up vista. The IP address offered was not accepted.
Then I changed the the linux PC to handle NAT. This gives the network
PC's the opportunity to reach the outside world. I started up the Vista
PC and it ACCEPTED the ip offer!!!!!
I have no idee what the logic is behind this, but it works like this
overhere.
I would be very pleased if someone here could reproduce this behaviour
of vista. Or can anyone explain this behaviour??
Koos.
--
Kerry Brown
Microsoft MVP - Shell/User
http://www.vistahelp.ca
"A.J. Werkman" <""AJ(dot)werkman(\"@)digifarma(dot)nl"> wrote in message
news:efCdnXia1J54-0zY...@zeelandnet.nl...
>I build up a testlab consisting of a linux PC that functions as router
>and dhcp server. I installed Fedora core 5 out of the box. I defined my
>network as 192.168.1.0/24. I configured the dhcp server to hand out ip
>addresses in the range 192.168.1.100-192.168.1.200.
>
>After that I started up vista. The IP address offered was not accepted.
>
>Then I changed the the linux PC to handle NAT. This gives the network
>PC's the opportunity to reach the outside world. I started up the Vista
>PC and it ACCEPTED the ip offer!!!!!
>
>I have no idee what the logic is behind this, but it works like this
>overhere.
>
>I would be very pleased if someone here could reproduce this behaviour
>of vista. Or can anyone explain this behaviour??
Guessing here (I'm not a network guru)...
Perhaps Vista doesn't accept a DHCP IP assignment if there's no
gateway IP provided as well?
So that with NAT off, there's no gateway offered via DHCP?
>--------------- ---- --- -- - - - -
Saws are too hard to use.
Be easier to use!
>--------------- ---- --- -- - - - -
Koos.
Koos.
cquirke (MVP Windows shell/user) wrote:
> On Tue, 13 Feb 2007 08:21:10 +0100, "A.J. Werkman"
>
>
I'm still having this issue on my network. Anyone got some updates?
Quick fix is to set static ip on computer with Vista, defining gateway
and nameserver.
--
recus
"recus" <gu...@unknown-email.com> wrote in message
news:aeb10f08a2a81408...@nntp-gateway.com...
I believe the DHCP server is not the issue, as noted in many of the
previous posts. I can not locate the source of the problem.
Curious;1202721 Wrote:
> What DHCP server are you setting up that will not let you start with an
> IP
> address of 192.168.x.x ?
>
> "recus" <gu...@newsgroup-email.com> wrote in message
> news:aeb10f08a2a81408...@newsgroup-gateway.com...> > >
> > >
> > > It's been a long time...
> > >
> > > I'm still having this issue on my network. Anyone got some updates?
> > >
> > > Quick fix is to set static ip on computer with Vista, defining
> > gateway
> > > and nameserver.
> > >
> > >
> > > --
> > > recus > >
--
recus
"recus" <gu...@unknown-email.com> wrote in message
news:fa86be9d7404a748...@nntp-gateway.com...