On 14/10/18 11:08, Ralph Corderoy wrote:
It's not setting your eth0's .9 either.
Ethernet is not connected.
Does your router know your LAN is 192.168.1.0/27, and not /24? Why did
you choose that? Do you have networks and hosts that would fall inside
192.168.1.0/24 but are outside 192.168.1.0/27, e.g. host
192.168.1.33/27?
Unless Raspbian has deviated from Debian Stretch in this area, you may
do better looking at Debian's documentation and Debian users solving the
problem.
Also, dhcpd and other programs often log their decisions, and
have a `debug' method to increase that logging. Turning that on may
explain more.
Can't find that on my stupid Talktalk router. I'll have a look around
and see if it is in R-Pi.
I wanted to restrict the number of DHCP addresses available, and at
the same time have a range for fixed addresses.
192.168.1.1-31 is the total range, thus 255.255.255.224 for Subnet mask:
Here is my documentation:
Network 192.168.1.0
Subnet 255.255.255.224
Gateway 192.168.1.1
Broadcast 192.168.1.31
192.168.1.1 Talktalk Router admin/ pw*****
ESSID Ashmeads-downstairs
192.168.1.2 Upstairs repeater 3Com router admin/pw****1 [Note, otherwise
not configured]
ESSID: bmth-wireless
192.168.1.3-9 unassigned
192.168.1.10 Downstairs XP PC -- Needs correcting - Now also Kubuntu!
192.168.1.11 Upstairs Linux PC
192.168.1.12 Brother Printer admin/ pw*****2
192.168.1.13 unassigned.
192.168.1.14 Envoy Solar Power controller admin/admin
192.168.1.16-30 DHCP
Peter
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