Re: Replacing network card causes DHCP to fail



Correct, I have two NICs. The internal one works fine and I haven't touched
it. It was the external one that is having the problem and which I tried
replacing.

"Cris Hanna [SBS-MVP]" wrote:

That's why DHCP is getting messed it...
For some reason SBS thinks this is your Internal NIC

But you have two nic cards...correct?
--
Cris Hanna [SBS-MVP]
-------------------------------------------------
Microsoft MVPs
Independent Experts (MVPs do not work for MS)
Real World Answers
---------------------------------------------------------
Please do not contact me directly regarding issues

"Bart" <Bart@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote in message news:8F8AB3B6-64C4-41D2-AD02-1F7770CB8D25@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Yes, Change IP points to the bad card.

Bart

"Cris Hanna [SBS-MVP]" wrote:

> And if you put that in, try the Change IP...does it point to the bad card?
>
> --
> Cris Hanna [SBS-MVP]
> -------------------------------------------------
> Microsoft MVPs
> Independent Experts (MVPs do not work for MS)
> Real World Answers
> ---------------------------------------------------------
> Please do not contact me directly regarding issues
>
> "Bart" <Bart@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote in message news:F5EB5052-E79E-4616-A795-92BD379BC7BC@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
> That wizard will also not work. I've also tried restoring the DHCP database.
> The only thing I've been able to get to work is putting the old, bad card
> back in.
>
> "Cris Hanna [SBS-MVP]" wrote:
>
> > Go to the Server Management Console and Try the Change IP wizard.
> > Does it pick up your external nic?
> >
> > --
> > Cris Hanna [SBS-MVP]
> > -------------------------------------------------
> > Microsoft MVPs
> > Independent Experts (MVPs do not work for MS)
> > Real World Answers
> > ---------------------------------------------------------
> > Please do not contact me directly regarding issues
> >
> > "Bart" <Bart@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote in message news:C7312072-8E93-4C10-8F09-E73513EBD526@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
> > I have a bad network card for my outgoing (Internet) connections. I replaced
> > it, configured the new card with the same settings... and DHCP for the lan
> > computers fails.
> >
> > It's like the DHCP is tied to the old card. How can I fix that? The DHCP
> > server is bound to the correct domain name and internal card (192.168.0.1).
> > CEICW will not run as well, and the DHCP serrvice will not start.
> >
> > Do I need to reinstall DHCP? I thought this would be a 10-minute hardware fix
.



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