Tek-Tips is the largest IT community on the Internet today!

Members share and learn making Tek-Tips Forums the best source of peer-reviewed technical information on the Internet!

  • Congratulations gkittelson on being selected by the Tek-Tips community for having the most helpful posts in the forums last week. Way to Go!

Search results for query: *

  • Users: jsimo
  • Order by date
  1. jsimo

    Same address, two different hosts

    You folks rock! Thanks for all of the help and attention!
  2. jsimo

    Same address, two different hosts

    Some of the IP addresses are documents..... Grrr! I meant documented!
  3. jsimo

    Same address, two different hosts

    Thank you for the explanation. I am going through a list of IP addresses from the prior systems administrator which is old and out dated. In the process I am doing ping sweeps to determine live hosts according to the list I have. Some of the IP addresses are documents just as I pasted...
  4. jsimo

    Same address, two different hosts

    The ping is being done from an XP SP2 workstation. I get the same results with CentOS. I have another subnet that this is happening with as well. Pasted are the results. C:\WINDOWS\system32>ping 198.187.5.011 Pinging 198.187.5.9 with 32 bytes of data: Reply from 198.187.5.9: bytes=32...
  5. jsimo

    Same address, two different hosts

    No the machines are not clustered. These devices are 10/100 hubs and print servers (Intel). Interestingly enough if I ping 10.10.3.03 I get a reply from 10.10.3.11. Pinging 10.10.3.3 gets a reply from the expected address (10.10.3.3). This is strange and I have not encountered this before...
  6. jsimo

    Same address, two different hosts

    Have any of you experienced addresses such as 10.10.3.03 and 10.10.3.3 being different? I was pretty sure that these are the same addresses however on our network these are two different hosts.

Part and Inventory Search

Back
Top