March 15, 20179 yr Hi everyone. I'm just curious if setting a static IP was really as simple as changing these two settings to Manual & the specified IP. Do I need to do anything on my router? I'm a little wary of doing something wrong and not being able to access the server, but I should be able to just go to tower.local right? Thanks and sorry if this is in the wrong spot! Edited March 15, 20179 yr by drogg
March 15, 20179 yr Yes It is that simple. Personally, I'm a fan however setting static IP's within the router and keeping all the computers set to DHCP, but the end result is the same
March 15, 20179 yr The one problem with setting the IP static locally (without using the router) is that the router may try to assign the address via DHCP to another computer and you end up with two devices with the same IP. I believe this might happen if non-static computer A came up, got the IP address, then static computer B came up and tried to use the same address. Option 1: Set the static IP to an address outside the pool of addresses the router uses Option 2: Set the static IP on the router Personally, I tend to prefer option 2, since it lets me keep track of all my static IP devices from one location (the router) rather than needing to keep track of what has been assigned where, externally. Of course, if your router has a pool that starts at like 192.168.1.1, setting unraid to .250 or something is usually pretty safe as it would be rare for enough clients to be on the network to request that high. Edited March 15, 20179 yr by SnickySnacks
March 15, 20179 yr Author 1 hour ago, SnickySnacks said: The one problem with setting the IP static locally (without using the router) is that the router may try to assign the address via DHCP to another computer and you end up with two devices with the same IP. I believe this might happen if non-static computer A came up, got the IP address, then static computer B came up and tried to use the same address. Option 1: Set the static IP to an address outside the pool of addresses the router uses Option 2: Set the static IP on the router Personally, I tend to prefer option 2, since it lets me keep track of all my static IP devices from one location (the router) rather than needing to keep track of what has been assigned where, externally. Of course, if your router has a pool that starts at like 192.168.1.1, setting unraid to .250 or something is usually pretty safe as it would be rare for enough clients to be on the network to request that high. I see. But a restart of the infringing computer would fix it, right?
March 16, 20179 yr Probably, but who needs the headache? Better to use a solution that prevents the problem in the first place.
March 16, 20179 yr 56 minutes ago, drogg said: I see. But a restart of the infringing computer would fix it, right? Not usually. If the dhcp server is brain dead enough to offer an address that is in use statically on the network, it probably will reissue the address on restart. However, more and more of the home grade routers I run into keep a MAC list with associated IP's on everything that answers on the network. They will not issue a dhcp ip in conflict, so as long as the server with the static ip is on consistently, you wouldn't run into a conflict anyway. If a device with a static IP set to a currently valid lease is connected, it will conflict, but many devices will detect such a collision, and warn you. TL;DR Your router's LAN dhcp config page should help you determine a good address to use if you choose to set a static IP.
March 17, 20179 yr On 3/15/2017 at 5:41 PM, Squid said: Personally, I'm a fan however setting static IP's within the router and keeping all the computers set to DHCP On 3/15/2017 at 5:42 PM, SnickySnacks said: The one problem with setting the IP static locally (without using the router) is that the router may try to assign the address via DHCP to another computer and you end up with two devices with the same IP. I believe this might happen if non-static computer A came up, got the IP address, then static computer B came up and tried to use the same address. Option 1: Set the static IP to an address outside the pool of addresses the router uses Option 2: Set the static IP on the router Personally, I tend to prefer option 2, since it lets me keep track of all my static IP devices from one location (the router) rather than needing to keep track of what has been assigned where, externally. Of course, if your router has a pool that starts at like 192.168.1.1, setting unraid to .250 or something is usually pretty safe as it would be rare for enough clients to be on the network to request that high. I like having each device use DHCP and assign static addresses in the router. That way if the router has to change, or if the device is moved to another environment, then everything still works. Additionally... I assign the static addresses with the 4th subnet starting with '1'. (192.168.1.1xx), but I have my router assign dhcp from a pool from 201-249 (192.168.1.2xx) That way I can tell from a glance if I have missed assigning a device or there is a 'guest' device on my lan.
July 15, 20196 yr I'm reviving this post because all my network settings are greyed out. I can't change a single setting in there and I can't figure out why.
July 15, 20196 yr 53 minutes ago, Ruckus42 said: I'm reviving this post because all my network settings are greyed out. I can't change a single setting in there and I can't figure out why. Have you stopped the array? That is needed to change most of the network settings.
July 15, 20196 yr 1 minute ago, itimpi said: Have you stopped the array? That is needed to change most of the network settings. Aaaaaah, of course! I'm rebuilding parity at the moment, so I'll wait, but I'm sure that's it. Thanks!
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