Forum › Forums › Freesat HD › FOXSAT HDR › DNS when using DHCP
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Anonymous.
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May 22, 2011 at 9:18 am #12166
Anonymous
InactiveJust installed the SAMBA component of Raydon’s Media and File Server Bundle (Release 3c). Works great. Thanks to all involved.
The Foxsat HDR is currently getting its IP addresses using DHCP from a 2wire router. All seems normal except the DNS address of 64.72.152.0. This resolves to somewhere in Indianapolis.
My netbook also uses DHCP from the same router and gets 192.168.0.1 as the DNS
Anyone else see this.
May 22, 2011 at 1:39 pm #25780Anonymous
Inactive192.168.0.1 points to your router – which will pass the requests to the addresses set for it or aquired from your ISP. See what DNS your router is using (Normally shown in something like ‘Status’). It is normal to use multiple DNS servers (up to 4, of which usually the last one is on a different network usually abroad – but only the first two of these are normally passed by DHCP).
Open a command prompt [Run cmd.exe] and enter ping FOXSAT-HDR and post the results. [If the address resolves to anything outside the 192.168.0 network you have a domain search suffix set.
May 22, 2011 at 2:08 pm #25781super-admin
KeymasterI would recommend setting the FOXSAT-HDR a static IP address. You can manually stick in the router’s IP for the DNS resolver, and for each time the router or HDR is reset it has the same IP so you won’t need to remap.
May 22, 2011 at 2:09 pm #25782myhumax
ParticipantI would recommend setting the FOXSAT-HDR a static IP address. You can manually stick in the router’s IP for the DNS resolver, and for each time the router or HDR is reset it has the same IP so you won’t need to remap.
May 22, 2011 at 2:43 pm #25783Anonymous
InactiveIt was always my intention to use a static IP once I found that SAMBA worked. I was just intrigued about where this DNS IP came from. When I went back to configure my chosen static IP, netmask, gateway and DNS, the DHCP IP had changed to 240.20.80.0. Weird.
May 22, 2011 at 5:24 pm #25784Anonymous
InactiveI assume that is your ISP’s DNS ?
If you setup a static address either make an address reservation on your router or allocate an addrees outside of your routers DHCP address pool.
May 22, 2011 at 8:36 pm #25785Anonymous
InactiveREPASSAC – 3 hours ago »
I assume that is your ISP’s DNS ?
No, neither of the IPs I quoted are related to my ISP. I have since entered the static IPs that I want and the mystery will remain unsolved!
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