I have a Win2k8 R2 server and Win 7 clients. The Server has DHCP and DNS running on it. So far so good everything works fine.
Now the problem comes when I also enable DHCP on the router so that clients can get an Internet connection when the Server is down.
First I'd describe my subnet A:
a AD controller, say, adcontroller.mydomain with IP 192.168.1.3
a DHCP and DNS server, say, dhcpdns.mydomain with IP 192.168.1.10
Now I have a CISCO WRVS4400N wireless router, plug it through WAN port to the switch of subnet A.
I know there are mixed feelings about running multiple DHCP servers on one LAN, but I'm wondering about the best way to set their ranges.
In my case, I have a router which performs DHCP and also my Ubuntu Server which I use for FOG ghosting (among other things of course). Since FOG packages itself with a DHCP server, I figured it best to use it and help things run smoother for FOG.
I have 2 devices connected together:
Technicolor TG670 from my ISP on 192.168.0.254 as Internet Gateway (static, no dhcp)
Netgear WDNR37 v2 with dd-wrt on it (v24sp2) on 192.168.0.1
Set Up:
Internet <-> Gateway <-> Netgear
The Gateway has 4 Lan Ports, on 2 of them i have clients connected.
On the gateway's WAN port i connected the Netgear Router (on the Netgear device connected to a LAN po
I have a local network at home with a router and a small server. The router manages the local network (DHCP, etc) but does not support PPTP. On the server (Ubuntu 12.04) I set up pptpd and this is working fine ... except that the dhcp3 server started by pptpd is now conflicting with the router.
I installed Windows Server 2008 R2 on my one pc. I connected my laptop to server using a US Robotics router(ip: 192.168.1.4). That router's DHCP is disabled. The US Robotics router is connected to another ZTE router that has internet. On that also DHCP disabled.
Now only in my Server DHCP enabled. My server name is server.my-server.com.
First, let me state that I know very little about networking. I am a software developer. I have a client in Pittsburgh that has a Mac server and a Linux (RHEL) server on a LAN. They have a Netgear FVS 318v3 router on which they had a VPN running. They could do this because they had the router configured for IP-SEC and they only had Mac laptops as clients.
OK, I'm trying to 'learn' Server 2003. It's a home network, so is probably configured a little unusually. The router is a Virgin SuperHub and acts as DHCP (so clients can access internet without server necessarily being powered up) but has reserved IPs for every client (including the server).
I'm setting up a 2003 Server vm for testing purposes as a AD controller with DHCP. It's connected to a network with a DSL router already serving DHCP addresses to numerous other client machines.
I've configured the server vm with 2 NICs.
One is connected to the 'real' network of the DSL router.