Yes, that is typical behavior for a cable modem.
 
 
 
John Woodfield Delmarva WiFi http://www.delmarvawifi.com cell (410) 708-1937


-----Original Message-----
From: "That One Guy" <[email protected]>
Sent: Wednesday, January 28, 2015 3:34pm
To: "[email protected]" <[email protected]>
Subject: [AFMUG] cable modem question



what i see with one provider is that when you start a cable modem it is a DHCP 
server (motorola surfoboards) handing out a 192.168.100.x Ip gatewaying to the 
management interface 192.168.100.1 of the modem.
After the device completes network entry it converts to a bridge and you get 
your public IP space
i assume this is a common practice, but i dont know, we only deal with one 
cable company around here.
I hate this joint because they MAC filter for static IP space, which if fine 
and good, but its an up to 24 hour provisioning time to be able to switch out a 
firewall.
So today we went to go swap one prior to the provision, and after we put in our 
device and restarted their cable modem, it would never hand us anything other 
than the internal management range from the modem, like it never completed 
network entry. Called them, and their tech said he could see the physical 
connection, but no MAC. I kept telling him it was getting handed the management 
range from the surfboard, he kept assuring me the modem was strictly a bridge 
and contained no DHCP server ever at any point.
I finally told him to reprovision the device in their system, he said it 
wouldnt o any good but complied. After restart it completed entry and we got 
public IP assignment.
I assume network entry isnt the correct term for cable modems being configured 
once they register to the network. But is this how its supposed to work where 
the modem is a dhcp server (I assume i router) until the cableco says otherwise 
to it? Its how Ive always seen it happen. At home once, after a flood of DMCA 
hits, they blacklisted my modem and this was the behavior, like their system 
refused to let it enter and convert to a bridge. 
-- 


All parts should go together without forcing. You must remember that the parts 
you are reassembling were disassembled by you. Therefore, if you can't get them 
together again, there must be a reason. By all means, do not use a hammer. -- 
IBM maintenance manual, 1925

Reply via email to