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NICS 1

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jaymehall

MIS
Oct 30, 2006
42
CA
Hello,

I have 2x Intel GIG NICS in a Windows 2003 server. Both connections say connected; however when I bridge them - the two connections remain "connected" but the bridge says "network cable unplugged." I have reinstalled the drivers and MAC miniport and it has not resolved the issue.

Any ideas?
Thanks
 
Question, the nics on different subnets or are they on the same subnet and you want to team them not bridge them?

 
The NICS are on the same subnet - I would like to team them for redundancy - isn't that what a bridge does?

thanks
 
No bridging connects 2 different subnets, you want to team your nics. get on the intel website and download the teaming drivers for your nics, install and setup the team. not to difficult.
 
what are the benefits of teaming?
What I have two different NIC from different vendor, I assume it's not goint to work, right?
When to use bridging?

Can you please explain in detail I have never done this, but I can uderstand I will try?

Thanks
 
In order to team nics they need to be exactly the same and have teaming drivers supplied by the manufacturer. Windows does not natively support teaming.

Benefits of teaming:
A team consists of two to more NICs/ports that function as though they were a single NIC. This virtual NIC appears to the system as a single physical address and a single IP address. Should one NIC in this team fail, the remaining NICs assume the failed NIC's traffic, providing resiliency. This fault tolerance is provided by all the configurations of teams available. When teamed, each NIC can also share the network traffic load, increasing the network throughput. Each type of team provides varying levels of traffic management, (called load balancing), and all teams provide fault tolerance.

Bridging as explained by MS:
Network Bridge provides an inexpensive and easy way to connect local area network (LAN) segments. A LAN segment is a single section of network media that connects computers. For example, suppose you have three computers: computer A, computer B, and computer C. Computer A has two Ethernet network adapters, and computers B and C have one Ethernet network adapter each. An Ethernet cable connecting A to B creates one LAN segment. Another Ethernet cable connecting A to C creates another LAN segment.
Traditionally, if you want a network with more than one segment, you have two options: routing or bridging. IP routing is a common solution for connecting network segments. However, to set up IP routing you either must buy hardware routers or set up the computers at the junctions between segments to operate as routers. IP routing requires difficult IP addressing configuration for each computer on each network segment, and each network segment must be configured as a separate subnet. IP routing is a good solution for large networks, where scalability is important, and where there is an experienced staff to configure and maintain the network. A bridge does not require difficult configurations, but you must purchase additional hardware bridges. Neither of these options are ideal if you have a home or small office network, do not want to purchase expensive bridging hardware, and do not have experienced staff to administer an IP routing network.
With Network Bridge, you can connect LAN segments by selecting the appropriate network connection icons and clicking Bridge Connections. Equally easily, you can enable the bridge and add connections to it. The network bridge manages your network segments and creates a single subnet for the entire network. There is no configuration required, and you do not need to purchase additional hardware such as routers or bridges. IP addressing, address allocation, and name resolution is easy to do in a single subnet IP network.
The network bridge can create connections between different types of network media. In a traditional network, if you are using mixed media types you need a separate subnet for each type of media, and packet forwarding is required for each one of the network's multiple subnets. Packet forwarding is required because different protocols are used for different types of media. Network Bridge automates the configuration required to forward information from one type of media to another.
Only one bridge can exist on a computer running Windows XP, but you can use it to bridge as many network connections as the computer can physically accommodate.

Hope this aswers your questions.

RoadKi11
 
Thanks for the explaination, it really helped. I am going to try teamin on dell server and check it out.

Thanks everyone.
 
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