HP p2035n Printer Issues
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Only devices running Bonjour.
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Got any cascaded switches behind it? Or, god forbid, a hub?
Yeah, smelling like a packet storm on the network is puking all the good stuff for higher level protocols. Parse the arp tables and see if you can find something out of place. I'll put the two bucks I won on the single switch stuff onto there being a crap "router" somewhere plugged in. Double or nuthin'!
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@PSX_Defector said:
Got any cascaded switches behind it? Or, god forbid, a hub?
There is a router. One router link goes to the voice switch, so that's completely separate. The other router link goes to the data switch (the one in question.) That switch has all direct attached desktops, servers, laptops, etc. It has one wireless AP attached to it and one additional switch hanging off of one port, but last I saw that switch was unused and only planned to be used for two devices in the foreseeable future. So probably not involved in any way.
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@PSX_Defector said:
I'll put the two bucks I won on the single switch stuff onto there being a crap "router" somewhere plugged in. Double or nuthin'!
Used to be six routers in there. They were all yanked out when the new switch was installed.
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I'd still get an arp output from the switch. If you have that few amount of devices it's probably nothing to go through and read what MACs are there and compare it to the database of addresses. If you find something that doesn't belong, it's potentially your culprit.
Beyond that, usual troubleshooting. Trace, ping, das boot which has already been done. Etc. etc. etc.
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@scottalanmiller said:
@PSX_Defector said:
I'll put the two bucks I won on the single switch stuff onto there being a crap "router" somewhere plugged in. Double or nuthin'!
Used to be six routers in there. They were all yanked out when the new switch was installed.
If there were six routers before, and now there are two, and only one in question, did the default gateway for the printer change? That could explain why Bonjour works but standard Windows printing does not.
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@thanksaj said:
If there were six routers before, and now there are two....t.
Two? Where did the second one come from?
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@scottalanmiller said:
@thanksaj said:
If there were six routers before, and now there are two....t.
Two? Where did the second one come from?
You said that the VoIP devices were on their own network. Ok, I just realized I misread this statement:
"There is a router. One router link goes to the voice switch, so that's completely separate. The other router link goes to the data switch (the one in question.)"
My mind dropped the word link from the second sentence. -
Question remains the same though. If you had six routers before, and now only one, did the default gateway change during the migration?
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@thanksaj said:
Question remains the same though. If you had six routers before, and now only one, did the default gateway change during the migration?
No, most of the extra routers were just creating loops.
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@scottalanmiller said:
@thanksaj said:
Question remains the same though. If you had six routers before, and now only one, did the default gateway change during the migration?
No, most of the extra routers were just creating loops.
Ok, so is it a new router with the same IP or just the elimination of the extra mess?
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@thanksaj said:
Ok, so is it a new router with the same IP or just the elimination of the extra mess?
Same router. Just extra routers removed.
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@scottalanmiller said:
@thanksaj said:
Ok, so is it a new router with the same IP or just the elimination of the extra mess?
Same router. Just extra routers removed.
Ok.