Hi,
I've got a strange issue with my windows 7 machine at home that has been bugging me for weeks, but I really need to get it sorted now so I'll detail as much as I can and hopefully someone can spot what might might be wrong.
I have a wireless router connected to the internet and 3 devices connected to it. They are:
[tt]
Name OS Network IPv4
PC1 Windows 7 WORKGROUP 192.168.2.2
LAPTOP1 Vista WORKGROUP 192.168.2.3
PS3 192.168.2.4
[/tt]
and they all get their IP addresses dynamically.
Both PC1 and LAPTOP1 can ping PS3 and get a response. PC1 can ping LAPTOP1 and get a response. LAPTOP1 cannot ping PC1 by ip address but it will work if I ping by it's name (which bizarrely shows that it is pinging via the IPv6 address). Also, both PC1 and LAPTOP1 can ping each other via the long IPv6 address that they both have so they can obviously see each other just not via IPv4. Both PC1 and LAPTOP1 have file and print sharing turned on and I've disabled the firewalls on both machines as well to rule that out. PC1 still gets out to the internet ok as well so the issue must be "incoming" based.
I don't really know what IPv6 is used for and I've tried disabling it on PC1 but all that happens then is that I can't access PC1 at all. Does anyone have any idea of what may be stopping PC1 from being seen, any ways I can look at fixing this, or any network tools that may help identify where it is failing?
Thanks,
Mark
Mark,
Darlington Web Design
Experts, Information, Ideas & Knowledge
ASP.NET Tips & Tricks
I've got a strange issue with my windows 7 machine at home that has been bugging me for weeks, but I really need to get it sorted now so I'll detail as much as I can and hopefully someone can spot what might might be wrong.
I have a wireless router connected to the internet and 3 devices connected to it. They are:
[tt]
Name OS Network IPv4
PC1 Windows 7 WORKGROUP 192.168.2.2
LAPTOP1 Vista WORKGROUP 192.168.2.3
PS3 192.168.2.4
[/tt]
and they all get their IP addresses dynamically.
Both PC1 and LAPTOP1 can ping PS3 and get a response. PC1 can ping LAPTOP1 and get a response. LAPTOP1 cannot ping PC1 by ip address but it will work if I ping by it's name (which bizarrely shows that it is pinging via the IPv6 address). Also, both PC1 and LAPTOP1 can ping each other via the long IPv6 address that they both have so they can obviously see each other just not via IPv4. Both PC1 and LAPTOP1 have file and print sharing turned on and I've disabled the firewalls on both machines as well to rule that out. PC1 still gets out to the internet ok as well so the issue must be "incoming" based.
I don't really know what IPv6 is used for and I've tried disabling it on PC1 but all that happens then is that I can't access PC1 at all. Does anyone have any idea of what may be stopping PC1 from being seen, any ways I can look at fixing this, or any network tools that may help identify where it is failing?
Thanks,
Mark
Mark,
Darlington Web Design
Experts, Information, Ideas & Knowledge
ASP.NET Tips & Tricks