We have a number of BCM200 units (running BCM Communications Manager Release 3.6 Build 2.2c) and when we reboot the BCMs (on a monthly basis after backup) quite often a number of i2002 sets will not succesfully reconnect. The message displayed on the set is "DHCP server unreachable".
The DHCP server in this case is a Windows 2000 server on a separate VLAN; a telco-managed router is responsible for forwarding DHCP packets from the set VLAN to the VLAN on which the DHCP server resides.
The problem has been observed with phones connected to Nortel Baystack 460-24T switches as well as Cisco Catalyst 3560 switches.
Not all of the sets fail to reconnect; the sets that fail to reconnect seem to be a random mix of Phase 1 (0602B59 and 603B59) and Phase 2 (0604D9C) sets of various vintages. We have seen it both on ancient Phase 1 sets and brand-new Phase 2 sets, so it doesn't seem to be common to a particular batch of sets.
We are often able to bring a number of the sets back online by unplugging the sets themselves; when that doesn't work restarting the DHCP service sometimes helps. However, sometimes neither unplugging the set nor restarting the DHCP service is able to bring a set back online.
We don't have the freedom to restart the DHCP forwarder, unfortunately.
Has anyone experienced or heard of similar symptoms?
I look forward to your suggestions.
The DHCP server in this case is a Windows 2000 server on a separate VLAN; a telco-managed router is responsible for forwarding DHCP packets from the set VLAN to the VLAN on which the DHCP server resides.
The problem has been observed with phones connected to Nortel Baystack 460-24T switches as well as Cisco Catalyst 3560 switches.
Not all of the sets fail to reconnect; the sets that fail to reconnect seem to be a random mix of Phase 1 (0602B59 and 603B59) and Phase 2 (0604D9C) sets of various vintages. We have seen it both on ancient Phase 1 sets and brand-new Phase 2 sets, so it doesn't seem to be common to a particular batch of sets.
We are often able to bring a number of the sets back online by unplugging the sets themselves; when that doesn't work restarting the DHCP service sometimes helps. However, sometimes neither unplugging the set nor restarting the DHCP service is able to bring a set back online.
We don't have the freedom to restart the DHCP forwarder, unfortunately.
Has anyone experienced or heard of similar symptoms?
I look forward to your suggestions.