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Zonker's avatar
Zonker
Apprentice
Aug 31, 2016
Solved

DHCP IP Duplication on wired and wireless - R7800 - Nighthawk X4S

Just purchased and set up my new R7800 tonight.  As I was going throught the attached devices list, I noticed I had two different devices with the same IP address.  The difference being that one was a Wired device (NAS device) and the other was a wireless device (Thermostat).  Strange thing is I can access and control these device through the LAN (for the NAS) and through a wireless app (thermostat).  How can this even be possible?  How is it the same IP address with different MAC address can even respond without a conflict?  There is no warning on the Thermostat or on the admin page of the NAS.

 

Thanks,


  • You should never allocate a static IP address within the range of addresses managed by a DHCP server.  As far as the DHCP server is concerned, it has sole control over delegating those addresses.  Any static IP addresses you allocate must be outside the control of the DHCP server.

     

    You should change the NAS's IP address or else change the DHCP range to avoid the conflict.  For example, suppose your NAS is using 192.168.1.2, then set the DHCP range to 192.168.1.3 through 192.168.1.100.

6 Replies

  • Retired_Member's avatar
    Retired_Member

    One of them may have a static IP setup check nas first

    • Zonker's avatar
      Zonker
      Apprentice

      Yes this is correct, my NAS has a static IP address.  So why would the DHCP server allocate the same IP address for the thermostat?  Anyway I flushed the thermostat IP and it now has a unique IP. 

       

      Z

      • TheEther's avatar
        TheEther
        Guru

        You should never allocate a static IP address within the range of addresses managed by a DHCP server.  As far as the DHCP server is concerned, it has sole control over delegating those addresses.  Any static IP addresses you allocate must be outside the control of the DHCP server.

         

        You should change the NAS's IP address or else change the DHCP range to avoid the conflict.  For example, suppose your NAS is using 192.168.1.2, then set the DHCP range to 192.168.1.3 through 192.168.1.100.