unless I'm missing something...
Vicodin
Chicago
Okay, this is weird or I'm blind and stupid.
I'm using a Linksys Wireless G router. All 4 ports are filled so I figure I would toss this 16 port Linksys switch into the mix.
DHCP enabled.
XP Pro on all the boxes. Windows firewall off.
Pick any port on the router and connect it to the uplink of the switch and it's supposed to work, right?
It isn't.
Am I doing something wrong?
Be gentle, I'm sensitive.
Fold on.
I'm using a Linksys Wireless G router. All 4 ports are filled so I figure I would toss this 16 port Linksys switch into the mix.
DHCP enabled.
XP Pro on all the boxes. Windows firewall off.
Pick any port on the router and connect it to the uplink of the switch and it's supposed to work, right?
It isn't.
Am I doing something wrong?
Be gentle, I'm sensitive.
Fold on.
0
Comments
SP1 or 2?
SP2 on one of them, SP1 on the others.
Even stranger... and this makes NO sense - I set it up exactly how I described above except I changed the port from 2 to 3.
Now it works.
(sigh)
Thanks for the input peeps.
Fold on.
(1) Sometimes the uplink port is really two ports, one MDI and one MDI-X, and only one can be used at a time; also in some cases a button toggles one port to be uplink (MDI) or normal (MDI-X) but I doubt that was the case
(2) Pretty commonly, routers are auto MDI, MDI-X meaning it doesn't matter what type of cable you use to which kind of port, it will switch each port to the necessary configuration to allow a connection. So in this case maybe you connected MDI-X(switch) to auto MDI, MDI-X(router) and it was fine... perhaps the other port was dead or something.
Really just test it some more if you want to figure out what's going on.