Windows 10 Network Icon / Networking help
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@mr-jones said in Windows 10 Network Icon / Networking help:
I have a client machine at my job that I've set a DHCP reservation for, and then set the NIC on the client machine statically to the reserved IP address to match the reservation.
Why? The whole point of a static reservation is so you don't set the the endpoint with a static IP. Otherwise you set the PC with a static IP, and you exclude that IP from your DHCP scope. I mean, yeah sure you CAN do what you did, and it should work - it's just weird.
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@mr-jones said in Windows 10 Network Icon / Networking help:
On this Win10 client, using it's WiFi capabilities, the NIC in the taskbar shows the "offline" globe, and has no connection (I've tested), unless I set the NIC to Dynamic, at which point everything works as intended.
Can you display the output of ipconfig /all when the NIC is statically set, then again when it's dynamically set?
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@dashrender said in Windows 10 Network Icon / Networking help:
@mr-jones said in Windows 10 Network Icon / Networking help:
I have a client machine at my job that I've set a DHCP reservation for, and then set the NIC on the client machine statically to the reserved IP address to match the reservation.
Why? The whole point of a static reservation is so you don't set the the endpoint with a static IP. Otherwise you set the PC with a static IP, and you exclude that IP from your DHCP scope. I mean, yeah sure you CAN do what you did, and it should work - it's just weird.
Weird and 2-3x the amount of work required. Either use a DHCP reservation OR set a static IP, not both.
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@dashrender said in Windows 10 Network Icon / Networking help:
@mr-jones said in Windows 10 Network Icon / Networking help:
I have a client machine at my job that I've set a DHCP reservation for, and then set the NIC on the client machine statically to the reserved IP address to match the reservation.
Why? The whole point of a static reservation is so you don't set the the endpoint with a static IP.
@dashrender I'm laughing because I wrote out a section explaining why I would try this specifically for you as I knew your first response would be "But why". But I took it out before I posted for whatever reason. It all just boiled down to shits n giggles. Obviously it wouldn't be a best practice, but in this case I don't see why it wouldn't work, and I want to understand what I'm missing.
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@mr-jones said in Windows 10 Network Icon / Networking help:
@dashrender said in Windows 10 Network Icon / Networking help:
@mr-jones said in Windows 10 Network Icon / Networking help:
I have a client machine at my job that I've set a DHCP reservation for, and then set the NIC on the client machine statically to the reserved IP address to match the reservation.
Why? The whole point of a static reservation is so you don't set the the endpoint with a static IP.
@dashrender I'm laughing because I wrote out a section explaining why I would try this specifically for you as I knew your first response would be "But why". But I took it out before I posted for whatever reason. It all just boiled to down to shits n giggles. Obviously it wouldn't be a best practice, but in this case I don't see why it wouldn't work, and I want to understand what I'm missing.
LOL - so much for being a mystery?
yeah, let's compare your ipconfig output and see what differences there are.
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After lookin at the output of
ipconfig /all
like @Dashrender asked.Can you ping the gateway?
Can you ping the DNS server(s)?
Does
nslookup google.com DNS_IP
give a valid address? -
It just dawned on me, but this may not help you in the least.
The 'Globe' icon only means that it can't see some MS defined Internet based service... IIRC. While working with the 911 system, we had networking. Devices were set to a Static IP address and were pingable, search able, and could be remoted with the software used (sadly I don't recall).
That said - It was an isolated network. You could not ever get to Google, MS or other - as it was a secure / limited network. It was
only used for 911 calls
!It's possible that yes, it's a problem in the config,.. but it could also be that you have
networking
but notinternet
access. -
@gjacobse said in Windows 10 Network Icon / Networking help:
It just dawned on me, but this may not help you in the least.
The 'Globe' icon only means that it can't see some MS defined Internet based service... IIRC. While working with the 911 system, we had networking. Devices were set to a Static IP address and were pingable, search able, and could be remoted with the software used (sadly I don't recall).
That said - It was an isolated network. You could not ever get to Google, MS or other - as it was a secure / limited network. It was
only used for 911 calls
!It's possible that yes, it's a problem in the config,.. but it could also be that you have
networking
but notinternet
access.This would make sense except for he says he gets the normal icon when using DHCP - assuming he's trying to be the same IP when static as when statically assigned dynamic address - this shouldn't be the issue.
Still a good thing of note -
@dashrender said in Windows 10 Network Icon / Networking help:
@gjacobse said in Windows 10 Network Icon / Networking help:
It just dawned on me, but this may not help you in the least.
The 'Globe' icon only means that it can't see some MS defined Internet based service... IIRC. While working with the 911 system, we had networking. Devices were set to a Static IP address and were pingable, search able, and could be remoted with the software used (sadly I don't recall).
That said - It was an isolated network. You could not ever get to Google, MS or other - as it was a secure / limited network. It was
only used for 911 calls
!It's possible that yes, it's a problem in the config,.. but it could also be that you have
networking
but notinternet
access.This would make sense except for he says he gets the normal icon when using DHCP - assuming he's trying to be the same IP when static as when statically assigned dynamic address - this shouldn't be the issue.
Still a good thing of noteNo disagreement there - but scanning past it pulled at a memory - not 'relevant',.. but also is.
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@mr-jones said in Windows 10 Network Icon / Networking help:
Overall I'm guessing it's a WAP or NIC issue, as other clients on domain with similar setup work fine
Is the AP using the same network range as the rest of the network?
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@dashrender said in Windows 10 Network Icon / Networking help:
yeah, let's compare your ipconfig output and see what differences there are.
@travisdh1 If memory serves, It's "media disconnected" and it pulls APIPA, with no ability to ping any DC/DNS Server, AP, or outside addresses, but due to the nature of this issue I'll have to be physically present at the machine. I'll try to knock this out today.
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@gjacobse said in Windows 10 Network Icon / Networking help:
It just dawned on me, but this may not help you in the least.
The 'Globe' icon only means that it can't see some MS defined Internet based service... IIRC.
I had this issue before and the research I did pointed to the device can't reach the MS Store so it shows offline.
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Is the AP using the same network range as the rest of the network?
@scottalanmiller It's a different VLAN. As there are two AP's on this VLAN, I've confirmed that at least the few other clients that I tried with Wireless NIC's on these two AP's work with this setup.
Going to try to dive in today unless something pressing comes up. Gotta make time to learn.
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@gjacobse said in Windows 10 Network Icon / Networking help:
It just dawned on me, but this may not help you in the least.
The 'Globe' icon only means that it can't see some MS defined Internet based service... IIRC. While working with the 911 system, we had networking. Devices were set to a Static IP address and were pingable, search able, and could be remoted with the software used (sadly I don't recall).
That said - It was an isolated network. You could not ever get to Google, MS or other - as it was a secure / limited network. It was
only used for 911 calls
!It's possible that yes, it's a problem in the config,.. but it could also be that you have
networking
but notinternet
access.Yes, one of my earlier lessons dealing with blacklisting web access to student machines was to always whitelist "msftncsi.com" or I get calls from teachers saying there's the "no internet globe", even though I've just blacklisted everything except the requested sites they use.
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@wrcombs said in Windows 10 Network Icon / Networking help:
@gjacobse said in Windows 10 Network Icon / Networking help:
It just dawned on me, but this may not help you in the least.
The 'Globe' icon only means that it can't see some MS defined Internet based service... IIRC.
I had this issue before and the research I did pointed to the device can't reach the MS Store so it shows offline.
Because that should be used as a metric on determining connectivity. (eye roll)
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@mr-jones said in Windows 10 Network Icon / Networking help:
Is the AP using the same network range as the rest of the network?
@scottalanmiller It's a different VLAN. As there are two AP's on this VLAN, I've confirmed that at least the few other clients that I tried with Wireless NIC's on these two AP's work with this setup.
Going to try to dive in today unless something pressing comes up. Gotta make time to learn.
OK - I'm guessing that the VLANs are playing into this somehow. They are preventing your client from getting a DHCP request would be my guess.
I know you said you have two other devices connected to same network - but are they using the same AP?How about a complete reset of all network settings and wifi settings - i.e. forget all WiFi networks and start over...