Another device using my IP address-who?
Mac Pro 2X4 2.8, Mac OS X (10.6.4), 10GB RAM, NVIDIA 8800
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Mac Pro 2X4 2.8, Mac OS X (10.6.4), 10GB RAM, NVIDIA 8800
Don T wrote:
I went into Bonjour and discovered that the only device using that IP address is my Brother HL-4070CDW wireless printer.
michael.murray wrote:
I have a similar problem since upgrading to 10.6.4. Frequently when I wake up my MBP it complains. It is on a home WiFi network with an airport extreme bridging to a Billion modem router. The Billion is handling the IP's. There are half a dozen or so devices in the house. No iPad. I did have it running with a manually assigned IP but switched to DHCP so it can go and find another one.
Anyone else getting this?
Michael
Don T wrote:
The setup wizard works by finding the ssid, then asking to confirm the type: wpa, none, etc. It then sets up it's own IP address. I'm assuming it does so through DHCP.
MrLinguaFranca wrote:
Hi folks,
I'm having the same problem(s), but to be honest, I have been having these problems for a good while now i.e. using Leopard and now Snow Leopard. Also, occasionally a Windows computer on my LAN would hijack my Mac's IP address I would return to my Mac with the message "os x "another device on the network is using your computer's IP address". I'm pretty sure that I was using a different wireless router at the time too, so for the problem to have persisted across two different router brands (Belkin and Netgear) suggests a lingering problem with OS X.
This should come as no surprise as OS X's wifi connectivity is notoriously patchy, so presumably as/when connections are dropped, the router releases that IP address and issues the IP address to the next device requiring it. (It's a brokering service, nothing more.) Then when the original computer regains connectivity, it finds that the IP address is taken, panics, and OS X switches to 'Self Assigned IP' address. In my case, this was 192.254.34.66. (See your Airport network settings the next time it happens to see if you experience the same.)
I've tried renewing the DHCP lease, but no luck. Even a restart sometimes doesn't fix it. So, once this setting has stubbornly taken hold, it means manually restarting the router, or switching off both machines competing for the same IP address, then starting them one after the other (a few minutes apart), hoping that they'll sensibly accept different IP addresses. Interestingly, the two competing devices at the moment are my Mac and my iPad. (The iPad has the most patchy wifi connectivity of all Apple's product line and that's really saying something.)
As a workaround for the time being, since I rarely travel with my Macbook, I've issued it a static IP address to prevent the problem happening, but a Mac is an expensive machine and I shouldn't have to resort to such workarounds.
That's my assessment, anyhow.
MrLinguaFranca.
MrLinguaFranca wrote:
Bob,
With all possible respect, perhaps fisheries is more your thing. I used the term 'hijacking' ought of frustration - I don't actually mean another computer is up to some unspeakable evil.
I administer all the devices I mentioned and rest assured, they're all using DHCP. And I check the SSID of whichever network I'm connected to, so my devices are NOT connected to a neighbour's network.
Lastly, I said I assigned my Mac a static IP address BECAUSE of these DHCP issues i.e. as a "workaround". If you look up the word 'workaround' in the dictionary, you'll see that what it is - a measure taken to circumvent an unwanted issue. (By definition, a workaround cannot be the cause.)
If you're not aware of the wifi connectivity issues with a swathe of Apple products, lucky you - welcome to the party.
Another device using my IP address-who?