Try for a while to give a reservation based on MAC address of on Win7 Pc
 
GuidoElia
HELPPC
 

  _____  

Da: Eisenberg, Wayne [mailto:wayne.eisenb...@pbvllc.com] 
Inviato: venerdì 15 gennaio 2010 17.24
A: NT System Admin Issues
Oggetto: RE: Windows 7 and DHCP puzzler


I can do that at work, but what about the home router? Can't really do much 
with that.
 

------------------------------------------------------ 
Wayne Eisenberg 
Server and PC Support Manager
Pepsi Bottling Ventures, LLC 

 

  _____  

From: HELP_PC [mailto:g...@enter.it] 
Sent: Friday, January 15, 2010 11:20 AM
To: NT System Admin Issues
Subject: R: Windows 7 and DHCP puzzler


Did you try a reconciliation of the DHCP server leased adresses ?
 
GuidoElia
HELPPC
 

  _____  

Da: Eisenberg, Wayne [mailto:wayne.eisenb...@pbvllc.com] 
Inviato: venerdì 15 gennaio 2010 16.53
A: NT System Admin Issues
Oggetto: RE: Windows 7 and DHCP puzzler


No activated firewalls, and yes there is an AV product, but it is not the same 
one for all the users affected  by this. (some Symantec, some Sophos) and they 
are not configured to block anything - just AV and spyware scanning at the 
moment.
 

  _____  

From: James Hill [mailto:james.h...@superamart.com.au] 
Sent: Thursday, January 14, 2010 7:30 PM
To: NT System Admin Issues
Subject: RE: Windows 7 and DHCP puzzler



Haven't seen that issue but any firewall/AV products on the machines?  That 
would be my first suspect.

 

From: Eisenberg, Wayne [mailto:wayne.eisenb...@pbvllc.com] 
Sent: Friday, 15 January 2010 10:20 AM
To: NT System Admin Issues
Subject: Windows 7 and DHCP puzzler

 

Has anyone noticed any problems with Windows 7 getting an IP address from DHCP? 
In our pilot testing, we are noticing that a significant portion (>30%) of our 
users are not successfully getting an IP address from the local DHCP server. It 
happens with wired and/or wireless, across make and model, different antivirus 
programs. It can happen if the DHCP server is on the same subnet and also if it 
is on a different subnet (ip helper address configured in the router). No 
firewalls turned on. Everything was fine for a while, and then some laptop 
users started having problems getting an address from their home router. Some 
folks can get an address at home, but have trouble getting it at the office. If 
you give them a static IP, they can work. That is obviously not a viable 
solution. We need DHCP to work no matter where they are - just like it works 
for XP. :) BTW, none of our XP users have any problems at all. This is strictly 
a Win7 issue. We've tried removing some MS patches among other things, but 
nothing fixes it across the board. Any ideas?

 

Points and ice cream will be awarded to anyone who can come up with an answer. 
:)

 

Thanks,

Wayne

 

 

 


 

 


 

 


 

 


 


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