Is there a way to have two separate network interface cards have some
sort of failover redundancy with one ip address (two nics with one ip,
say 192.168.1.3, both cards pointing to that, or some implementation of
redundancy)?
This is on a brand new Windows 2003 Enterprise Server Edition.
Re: two nics, one ip ... Think of it like RAID 1 for your nics.... The standard config for our companys server farms is to have at least one ...switches, and they are Intel Gigabit nics. ... sort of failover redundancy with one ip address (two nics with one ip, ... (microsoft.public.windows.server.networking)
Re: AD and (extra) NIC ... a DC which has 2 NIC cards.... There are known issues with domain controllers that have two network interface cards enabled at the same time. ... Things that might break include resolving names, Group Policy application and replication. ... It isn't going to break completely but things might get fancy with two NICs.... (microsoft.public.windows.server.active_directory)
Re: two nics, one ip ... and they are Intel Gigabit nics....David Lee...sort of failover redundancy with one ip address (two nics with one ip, ... (microsoft.public.windows.server.networking)
Re: MAC Address ...Network interface cards have physical addresses, not servers.... You can say that your server has two NICs and you can say that the physical ... > However, from IPCONFIG / ALL, we find that the MAC address ... (microsoft.public.win2000.general)