On Jul 3, 2013, at 12:02 PM, Roel_D wrote:

> Did the Cisco manager do a reboot of the router after you switched servers? 
> If the router had rather long ARP and DHCP caching then it wouldn't give your 
> OI server new addresses after switching AND it would route all traffic still 
> to the old MAC addresses. 
> 
> Thus the network would seem broken, but only because of the old arp-cache and 
> DHCP server cache. 
> 
> If this would be the case then you are hunting for solutions in the complete 
> opposite direction. You might have had a working config on day one... 
> 
> Kind regards, 
> 
> The out-side
> 
> Op 3 jul. 2013 om 17:10 heeft "[email protected]" 
> <[email protected]> het volgende geschreven:

Well, I would be that "Cisco manager" -- and everything else here.  And you 
know what they say about us "Jack of All Trades".  We're "Masters of None."   
[]:-o  Oops...  It's sad, but true...

I know the ISP rebooted the modem remotely when they disabled DHCP on the Cisco 
modem so it wouldn't assign our static IP addresses without me knowing it.  And 
I rebooted the modem a couple of times yesterday at what I thought were 
strategic times.  But I don't remember exactly when.

I'm not feeling so great today, so I don't think I'm going to make it down to 
the remote location where all this equipment is.  My eleven year health odyssey 
is telling me I need to take a break from this.  But when I go down there next, 
I'll be sure to reboot it again before I try anything further.

Thanks for the tip!  I appreciate it.  

Have a great day.

fp 



_______________________________________________
OpenIndiana-discuss mailing list
[email protected]
http://openindiana.org/mailman/listinfo/openindiana-discuss

Reply via email to