Tech Support > Microsoft Windows > Networking > IP Conflict
IP Conflict
Posted by Michelle on February 15th, 2008


I have a laptop I am trying to put on the network. I gave it an IP of
146.186.143.246 I got an ip conflict and it returned a 0.0.0.0 ip so I then
went in and and found it to be conflicting with MAC 00-10-5A-1F-4A-05 so I
then selected another address and changed the ip to 146.186.143.239 and got
the same error with the same MAC that has the conflict...anyone have any
ideas.
SN is 255.255.255.192 GW 146.186.143.193

Posted by Malke on February 15th, 2008


Michelle wrote:

I'm confused by your address scheme. What kind of network set up do you
have? Router? Switch and all machines have public IPs like that?

IPv4 Allowable addresses for private networks:

10.0.0.0/8. The 10.0.0.0/8 private network is a Class A network ID that
supports the following range of valid IP addresses: 10.0.0.1 through
10.255.255.254.

172.16.0.0/12. The 172.16.0.0/12 private network can be interpreted either
as a block of 16 Class B network IDs or as a 20-bit assignable address
space (20 host bits) that can be used for any subnetting scheme within the
private organization. The 172.16.0.0/12 private network supports the
following range of valid IP addresses: 172.16.0.1 through 172.31.255.254.

192.168.0.0/16. The 192.168.0.0/16 private network can be interpreted either
as a block of 256 Class C network IDs or as a 16-bit assignable address
space (16 host bits) that can be used for any subnetting scheme within the
private organization. The 192.168.0.0/16 private network supports the
following range of valid IP addresses: 192.168.0.1 through 192.168.255.254.

Malke
--
MS-MVP
Elephant Boy Computers
www.elephantboycomputers.com
Don't Panic!

Posted by Michelle on February 15th, 2008


It is a network at a Univeristy. We have switches we don't use active
directory (yet) an we do not authenticate when we log on. The users just log
intot he computer but the network connection gives them the ability to get
out to the internet.

"Malke" wrote:

Posted by Malke on February 15th, 2008


Michelle wrote:

I'm sorry but this isn't enough information and it doesn't really make
sense. Saying "the network connection gives them the ability..." is
nebulous. There has to be some device acting as a DHCP/DNS/possibly proxy
server. Using switches or routers has nothing to do with Active Directory.

You should contact the University's IT Dept. because they will know how
they've set up their network and how to resolve your issue.


Malke
--
MS-MVP
Elephant Boy Computers
www.elephantboycomputers.com
Don't Panic!

Posted by Michelle on February 15th, 2008


The university IT did not set up our network. At this university each
department has their own it dept and they set up their own network. I don't
know exactly how this one is set up as I am just the ITS for the department
not the network admin. However this is not a question as to how the network
is set up I just wanted to know if any knows why if I change an address two
three or even 4 times why it would have a conflict with the exact same MAC
each time.

"Malke" wrote:

Posted by Malke on February 16th, 2008


Michelle wrote:

Probably because you're using a public IP addressing scheme instead of
private IP addresses the way you should be. Contact the systems
administrator or have an outside professional come in and help you.

Good luck,

Malke
--
MS-MVP
Elephant Boy Computers
www.elephantboycomputers.com
Don't Panic!

Posted by Matth on February 18th, 2008


It might be that 2 devices on your network actually have identical MAC
addresses. This in not suppose to be possible but I have have seen it. 2
NIC's from the same manufacturer with identcial MAC addresses. Not sure what
you can do if this is the case but worth eliminating as a possibility

"Michelle" wrote:

Posted by Michelle on February 18th, 2008


Thank you I will look into that.

"Matth" wrote:


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