From: Carl Gross on 3 May 2010 17:25 I have a Windows server (2003 SP2) in our network that is NOT part of our domain, but is being given an IP address by DHCP. It has recently had BAD_ADDRESS put under the IP Name. Would it hurt if I deleted the IP address from the DHCP server and let it re-assign the IP address? Also, how would I find out the identity of the other machine trying to be assigned the same IP address?
From: kj [SBS MVP] on 3 May 2010 18:06 Carl Gross wrote: > I have a Windows server (2003 SP2) in our network that is NOT part of > our domain, but is being given an IP address by DHCP. It has > recently had BAD_ADDRESS put under the IP Name. Would it hurt if I > deleted the IP address from the DHCP server and let it re-assign the > IP address? > > Also, how would I find out the identity of the other machine trying > to be assigned the same IP address? You probably have an address conflict. Try creating a dhcp reservation or exclusiion for this address in conflict -- /kj
From: Carl Gross on 12 May 2010 10:55 That did it. Thanks. "kj [SBS MVP]" wrote: > Carl Gross wrote: > > I have a Windows server (2003 SP2) in our network that is NOT part of > > our domain, but is being given an IP address by DHCP. It has > > recently had BAD_ADDRESS put under the IP Name. Would it hurt if I > > deleted the IP address from the DHCP server and let it re-assign the > > IP address? > > > > Also, how would I find out the identity of the other machine trying > > to be assigned the same IP address? > > You probably have an address conflict. Try creating a dhcp reservation or > exclusiion for this address in conflict > > -- > /kj > > > . >
From: kj [SBS MVP] on 12 May 2010 11:14 Carl Gross wrote: > That did it. Thanks. > Anytime & thanks for posting back. > "kj [SBS MVP]" wrote: > >> Carl Gross wrote: >>> I have a Windows server (2003 SP2) in our network that is NOT part >>> of our domain, but is being given an IP address by DHCP. It has >>> recently had BAD_ADDRESS put under the IP Name. Would it hurt if I >>> deleted the IP address from the DHCP server and let it re-assign the >>> IP address? >>> >>> Also, how would I find out the identity of the other machine trying >>> to be assigned the same IP address? >> >> You probably have an address conflict. Try creating a dhcp >> reservation or exclusiion for this address in conflict >> >> -- >> /kj >> >> >> . -- /kj
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