Mathieu
Regular Contributor
Hi all
This is a recurring issue which has persistently followed me through FW upgrades:
My A/V Receiver (Onkyo) offers a classical ethernet and wifi connectivity. I have managed to identify MAC address for each of them, and assigned each a static IP (outside DHCP range).
Now, owing to karma, or Nemesis - or most likely, kn0bness - the client frequently loses internet connection.
As I check the client list (Network Map / View list) I can see an entry for the client, whose name and MAC address match the reservation list, only it displays the other interface's IP.
Here's the client list:
Here's the DHCP Reservation (LAN / DHCP Server)
My preference is for wired connection, but obviously my definite preference is for something that works, albeit through wifi.
Has anyone encountered similar issues? Could you recommend a way to address this? Would writing a script (I'd have to come back to the community for help) that checks which connection is active beforehand and rejects the other help? I am skeptical about banning one of the interface altogether, as I am not sure wether the confusion lies at the router level or the client's (ie I prevent MAC of client's wifi to connect, but that's the hardwired connection which is banned. Or both...)
Thanks for your thoughts
Mathieu
This is a recurring issue which has persistently followed me through FW upgrades:
My A/V Receiver (Onkyo) offers a classical ethernet and wifi connectivity. I have managed to identify MAC address for each of them, and assigned each a static IP (outside DHCP range).
Now, owing to karma, or Nemesis - or most likely, kn0bness - the client frequently loses internet connection.
As I check the client list (Network Map / View list) I can see an entry for the client, whose name and MAC address match the reservation list, only it displays the other interface's IP.
Here's the client list:
Here's the DHCP Reservation (LAN / DHCP Server)
My preference is for wired connection, but obviously my definite preference is for something that works, albeit through wifi.
Has anyone encountered similar issues? Could you recommend a way to address this? Would writing a script (I'd have to come back to the community for help) that checks which connection is active beforehand and rejects the other help? I am skeptical about banning one of the interface altogether, as I am not sure wether the confusion lies at the router level or the client's (ie I prevent MAC of client's wifi to connect, but that's the hardwired connection which is banned. Or both...)
Thanks for your thoughts
Mathieu