Erik,

In Windows, do an "ipconfig /all" and one of the options should say DHCP
Enabled (Yes/No).


Barry deFreese
NTS Technology Services Manager
Nike Team Sports
(949)-616-4005
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

"Technology doesn't make you less stupid; it just makes you stupid faster."
Jerry Gregoire - Former CIO at Dell



-----Original Message-----
From: Price, Erik [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: Thursday, October 10, 2002 1:34 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]; [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: RE: Windows Domains? (was: getting a 3C905B network card




> -----Original Message-----

> > So then, what should I do from there?  That's exactly what I did
> > (except the /release /renew part) in the first place, but when I
> > statically assigned myself that IP in Linux by writing it to
> > /etc/network/interfaces, I had the problem.
> 
> 
> The "ipconfig" command by itself just reports what Windows 
> believes is 
> its current IP address. The /release tells Windows to tell the DHCP 
> server that it no longer wants this address and the server 
> can have it 
> back to reallocate to whatever client needs one. The /renew tells 
> Windows to ask the DHCP server for an address, and in many cases will 
> result in the same IP being given back to the client.
> 
> If the /renew doesn't work, there's something else at work on your 
> network, such as a network switch getting confused (we had 
> some similar 
> problems a few years ago on our new ATM network). Generally, 
> waiting 15 
> minutes or so allowed the "glitch" to clear up out of the network 
> hardware. (Or alternatively we could move to a different network port 
> and get going again.)

Well, I was in Linux again today and I did a couple of things.  Here is what
I did and the response I got, can anyone comment on this?

1) I installed "pump" upon the recommendation of a co-worker (using "apt-get
install pump", from the CD-ROM).  But executing "pump -i eth0 --status"
yields the error message "Operation failed".  So I must need to configure it
or something.

2) I changed the /etc/network/interfaces file to say

    auto lo
    iface lo inet loopback

    auto eth0
    iface eth0 inet dhcp

(without the indent) But then when I executed "/etc/init.d/networking
restart", it just hung for a while and said "Done".  No IP address was
assigned, according to "/sbin/ifconfig".

3) I went back into Windows and tried the /release and /renew arguments to
"ipconfig".  Here is the response I got:

H:\>ipconfig /release

Windows 2000 IP Configuration

Error: No adapters bound to TCP/IP are enabled for DHCP

H:\>ipconfig /renew

Windows 2000 IP Configuration

Error: No adapters bound to TCP/IP are enabled for DHCP




I'm pretty clueless at this point.  Part (3) above suggests that DHCP isn't
even being used here, but I'm pretty certain that DHCP is indeed being used
by my company's network.  What's the deal?  Anyone have any advice?  I
appreciate it.



Erik


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