Unfortunately I can't give the projector a static IP because I have a
classless subnet (255.255.252.0 mask) and the web interface on the
projector will only accept classful subnet masks.  Infocus tech support
was zero help with this.  It will accept a DHCP assigned address with
this mask, at least.  I did try giving it a different IP address through
DHCP but it didn't resolve problem.

 

From: Cameron [mailto:[email protected]] 
Sent: Tuesday, July 19, 2011 1:46 PM
To: NT System Admin Issues
Subject: Re: Weird Duplicate IP address problem

 

Have you tried giving the projector a static IP and rebooting the
server?

On Tue, Jul 19, 2011 at 12:56 PM, Ralph Smith
<[email protected]> wrote:

I have a Windows 2008 Server with a statically assigned IP address that
seems to have an issue with another  device on my network.

Whenever the server is rebooted, it displays an error that there is a
duplicate IP address on the network, and changes its own address to an
auto-configured 169... address.

The thing is it says it conflicts with the device having the IP address
of 0.0.0.0., and gives the MAC address of the conflicting device.  As
far as I know this means it's a MAC address conflict.  However the
conflicting device does not share the IP address or the MAC address of
the server.

The other device happens to be an Infocus projector that gets it IP
Address through a DHCP reservation.

If I pull the cable on the projector and then reset the NIC on the
server there are no problems.  If I then plug the projector back in the
two machines coexist happily until I have to reboot the server.

Also, if I change the IP address on the server NIC  without
disconnecting the projector, the server is happy with its new address
until the next time it reboots.  At which point I can change it back to
its original IP address and again all is well.

So it detects an IP address conflict, but there is no duplicate IP
address on the network, nor is the MAC address a duplicate.  It only
throws this error when the server boots, otherwise its fine.  The server
is a VM on Hyper-V and is a DC that also does DNS and DHCP.  I've looked
at DNS, WINS, DHCP and don't see anything amiss.

Any suggestions on how to fix this?  Thanks.

 

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