Can anyone help me with this one ?
I've got a Cisco 2621, running IOS 12.2, with an 8 port analog module.
Ethernet 0 is using an ip of 172.22.10.1 and Ethernet 1 is using an ip of 172.19.10.1. The default gateway is our firewall.
The router has two purposes in life (or would if I could get it...
Does device manager report any problems with the ethernet adapter ?
Is the TCP/IP protocol installed and bound to the card ?
Have you got the microsoft client logon set as your default ?
Can you ping your loopback address ?
Exactly what problems is the machine exhibiting ?
Can you just clarify that you *really* mean you have a 100 Megabit connection and that you're not referring to your internal LAN ?
If you really are goingto have a gigabit internet connection I'm very jealous
;-)
It basically runs as a part of the login script, drop it into there and it should work fine - there's nothing unusual about our setup.
*server* and *directory* were just to protect our innocence :-)
Replace them with the name of your server and the directory you want them to go into.
We run a batch file a bit similar to this....
date /T >> \\*server*\*directory*\%COMPUTERNAME%.log
time /T >> \\*server*\*directory*\%COMPUTERNAME%.log
echo %USERNAME% >> \\*server*\*directory*\%COMPUTERNAME%.log
echo "====================== " >>...
If you're on a domain, and have access to it, you can run the Server Manager tool.
If you want a true reflection of what's got a connection to your machine then do a netstat -a from a command prompt.
Daft question, but is PM 7.0 actually certified to work with XP ?
Have you got the program compatability updates installed on XP ?
Do Adobe have any patches for PM 7.0 regarding XP ?
Have you tried running it in compatability mode ?
Can you identify the source of the problem ?
IOW, is it the server that's struggling (% cpu time) and not being able to fulfill the connection requests from other clients within a certain time frame or is it the bandwidth throught the switch ?
Have you done performance checking of the server ...
If an internal modem works OK to the same phone point, and different external modems and cables don't make a difference there's only one common point-of-failure left.
The serial port.
Can you do a direct connection to COM1 (or COM2) via something like hyperterminal ?
OK....
It's fairly likely you can rule operating system out as the cause then, although with only one w2k box.....not entirely.
On the workstations - do they all use the same type of network cards ? Do you autonegotiate the speed/duplex or have you got it manually set ? Is there any difference...
Unsure of the exact config of your firewall but FTP needs ports 20 and 21 open for the data and control connections.
Sounds like you're missing a port ?
If you don't filter ports to the DMZ from your internal network, but you do from the internet (and who wouldn't..) and it works internally...
Are there any differences betwen the machines the users who do get kicked off use, and the ones that don't get kicked off use ?
Are there any differences in how they connect to the network ?
When you say they lose their connection to the network, do you mean the "network" as a whole...
Could indeed be lots of things ;-)
Easiest ones to check are that the duplex that is set on the NIC drivers and the duplex set on the switch agree and that both NIC and switch are running 100. I don't trust autonegotiation as far as I can throw it.
What sort of transfer rate would you expect...
It's also worth bearing in mind that the operating system you can run on those systems is limited by the lowest common denominator - in your case the Pentium 200's.
The best you'll be able to run on those will be a Windows 9x derivative or, at a push, NT 4. I wouldn't mix and match on the...
There are slight differences between the chips. The original Athlon was based on the "thunderbird" core and the Athlon XP/MP are based on the "palamino" core.
The Palamino core adds a few features like data-prefetching, larger table lookup buffers, etc. As a rough guide...
If I remember q931 debugging properly an 8090 points to the call being disconnected by your router (80) due to an error with PPP setup or authentication. It's not actually an error with the ISDN - the line is being cleared because the router's not happy about something.
It's sulking ;-)
Have a...
As you haven't specifically mentioned that you've set up the routing and as this is a point to point link between two sites just use a gateway of last resort on the cisco's.
ip route 0.0.0.0 0.0.0.0 serial0
Then either set the default gateway on the PC's at the main site (if you have no...
I'm a bit clearer on how your central router is configured now.
The fact that the encapsulation is failing to the remote router on the ping would *usually* indicate that the central site knows which interface to send the packets out of, but doesn't know how to route the packets.
If that makes...
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