Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Ted Mittelstaedt
Sent: Sunday, March 26, 2006 4:06 AM
To: Mark Jayson Alvarez; [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: RE: How do you keep users from stealing other user's ip??
Hi Mark,
The only way you can really lock it down is t
Hi Mark,
The only way you can really lock it down is to statically assign
everything (either with a DHCP server that has a table of mac addresses)
and maintain an accurate list of mac addresses, and use managed switches
that have filtering capabilities.
We do this on bridged DSL networks (exc
Mark Jayson Alvarez wrote:
Hi,
Ok here's our problems. Mostly pertaining to tracking down who is this
user eating up our bandwidth or who is this user flooding our network.
1. Users when they want to plug a machine to the network... let's say
their own testbeds, they will choose whatever ip
> 1. Users when they want to plug a machine to the network... let's
> 1. say their own testbeds, they will choose whatever ip they want
> 1. possibly stealing used ip's.
Use DHCP, then users do not have to choose an IP, it is given to them.
Plus it gives them all parameterstheyneed to configure
Hi,
Ok here's our problems. Mostly pertaining to tracking down who is this user
eating up our bandwidth or who is this user flooding our network.
1. Users when they want to plug a machine to the network... let's say their
own testbeds, they will choose whatever ip they want possibly stealin
Mark Jayson Alvarez wrote:
Good day,
We are trying to reorganize our local area network and I need some tips on how you are managing your own lan...
We have a vanilla pc router with interface facing our private lan and interface facing the Internet.
One problem which we are exper
On Mar 23, 2006, at 11:25 PM, Mark Jayson Alvarez wrote:
Good day,
We are trying to reorganize our local area network and I need
some tips on how you are managing your own lan...
We have a vanilla pc router with interface facing our private lan
and interface facing the Internet.