This would work but it might be temporarily disruptive to the network that
is using that subnet address legitimately. Is there another way to do it
that is not disruptive?

>>> Charles Cthulu Riley 8/1/03 2:56:41 PM >>>
Assign an address (as secondary)  from the incorrect range to the router
interface to which this device is connected, and from that router, connect
(telnet or ssh) to that device, fix the ip, (get disconnected in process,
of
course), and remove the incorret secondary from the router...voila and
other
French words I don't understand.

""John Neiberger""  wrote in message
news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> You have a device that is reachable only via telnet or console that
you've
> preconfigured with an IP address, subnet mask, and default gateway and
> subsequently shipped out to a remote location to be installed. Once the
> device was in place you realized that you've configured it with the wrong
> addressing information. The subnet you used actually exists at another
> location so this device is currently unreachable via IP. If you could
> somehow reach the device you'd be able to correct your mistake without
> having someone ship the device back to you.
>
> What can you do to restore IP connectivity to this device in its current
> location and make it reachable from both the local router and remote
> routers?
> **Please support GroupStudy by purchasing from the GroupStudy Store:
> http://shop.groupstudy.com 
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