David F Cepeda
New Around Here
I fixed this by setting those devices to Static IP. Even if they fall asleep they will always get the same IP hope that helps.
I think that is the best approach.
Until someone difinitively relates it to a problem or security issue, it doesn't seem worth being concerned about. Personally, I don't see the need to watch the network map 24/7
It could be that the device's MAC address has two outstanding DHCP leases out. DHCP leases have a timeout, so if you force a new one for some reason (I want the IP address to change, I shut the device off and then on, I left wireless range and then came back) the system will issue a new lease even if the old one hasn't expired (I think).
Yes, I saw this exact issue recently when I changed my wife's phone IP from random to determined, it only took a few hours to forget the old IP.So, I'm having the same thing on my new router, and found this forum when trying to figure it out.
After reading all of the posts here and thinking about how I ended up with it on my device (I forced an IP x Mac address binding) I think I have a guess:
It could be that the device's MAC address has two outstanding DHCP leases out. DHCP leases have a timeout, so if you force a new one for some reason (I want the IP address to change, I shut the device off and then on, I left wireless range and then came back) the system will issue a new lease even if the old one hasn't expired (I think). It's totally a guess and I haven't done any research to back it up, but if that's the case, no, it's not a security risk at all, it's just a natural part of how your network works, and it should go away in a few days assuming you don't do something to issue a dual lease again.
Again, this is just a guess, but I've mostly convinced myself, and figured I'd see if anyone else had an opinion.
I had the same problem with 2 Raspberry Pis both showing 2 connections after I switched them from static (assigned in the RPi) to manual (assigned in router webgui). They were like that for a month and only dropped the 2nd connection when I upgraded the Kernel on both of the RPis. Not sure if it was related to the kernel update on the RPis or I just happened to notice it after the update, but go figure.Similar problem on my 86U with latest Merlin. Have a Lenovo Yoga Notebook which is assigned a static ip by DHCP. The Notebook itself shows that it has been assigned the proper address in my subnet, whether running Windows or Linux. However, the Network Map on the 86U shows the correct mac address but an autoconfig ip address which is of course outside the subnet. I too am putting it down to a problem in the Network Map code.
I haven't seen that issue, and am confused as to how it could happen. When blocking a device via parental control, an IPTables DROP rule is added for the MAC. I've tried this with devices that show "multiple devices are connecting" and the MAC is correctly added to the chain, thus successfully blocking its access.There could be some security issues related to this specific problem. When I have Parental Control -> Time Scheduling enabled on a device, and when this "2 clients are connecting" happens on the device, the device will get internet access even though it is supposed to be blocked in Parental Control. Does anyone figured out something to workaround this?
For those who have this issue, try this:
Go to LAN - DHCP Server - Manually Assigned IP around the DHCP list
Click on Client Name. At the bottom of the list you will see "Show Offline Client List". Click on it to show old remembered clients.
Just click on the "x" on each to delete the clients from the router. Note you may have multiple records for the same client.
Hopefully the multiple client issue will disappear. See attached.
/usr/sbin/networkmap &
So, I'm having the same thing on my new router, and found this forum when trying to figure it out.
After reading all of the posts here and thinking about how I ended up with it on my device (I forced an IP x Mac address binding) I think I have a guess:
It could be that the device's MAC address has two outstanding DHCP leases out. DHCP leases have a timeout, so if you force a new one for some reason (I want the IP address to change, I shut the device off and then on, I left wireless range and then came back) the system will issue a new lease even if the old one hasn't expired (I think). It's totally a guess and I haven't done any research to back it up, but if that's the case, no, it's not a security risk at all, it's just a natural part of how your network works, and it should go away in a few days assuming you don't do something to issue a dual lease again.
Again, this is just a guess, but I've mostly convinced myself, and figured I'd see if anyone else had an opinion.
My guess is the same as @tristfall's.
I'm running Merlin 384.14 on a RT-AX88U. I manually changed the IP pool address range. At the time DHCP had assigned two mobile devices outside of the new range. After I changed the IP range the network map gave the "2 clients are connecting to the RT-AX88U through this device" for both mobile devices. When I googled the issue, I found this thread and @tristfall's guess. Sure enough, I waited a few hours and the issue disappeared for me. While other users might have other things going on that cause the same condition, if you've adjusted the IP range, you might be seeing a temporary dual lease issue.
Welcome To SNBForums
SNBForums is a community for anyone who wants to learn about or discuss the latest in wireless routers, network storage and the ins and outs of building and maintaining a small network.
If you'd like to post a question, simply register and have at it!
While you're at it, please check out SmallNetBuilder for product reviews and our famous Router Charts, Ranker and plenty more!