On Thursday, July 04, 2013 02:59 AM, [email protected] wrote:
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...

We may be masters of none but with some documentation we will eventually get the work done. :-D


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.


More rest! Healthy food! Sufficient exercise! Why are these things so hard to get :-(

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