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| Networking with Windows Vista Networking issues and questions with Windows Vista. (microsoft.public.windows.vista.networking_sharing) |
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I am running Vista Enterprise (final version) in a domain environment I have
turned on the Link-Layer Topology Discovery in local gp and domain gpo but I still get the error "Windows cannot discover any computer or device" I can browse in explorer to every machine on the network but it seems to want to communciate with microsoft.com. I also do not get a full connection to the internet in Network and Sharing Center. I can see my domain and I can connect to the internet and other PC's but when I try to repair the connection from domain to internet I get a "Windows cannot communicate with www.microsoft.com (207.46.19.30) the ping was successful but there was no response. I know this is because we are behind a Firewall but surely MS has thought of this and has a way around this? |
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Hmm, puzzling! I don't have an exact answer, but perhaps there's something
here that might give you some clues. Not sure about the "cannot discover any computers" or "do not get a full connection to the internet in Network and Sharing", but none of (well, none that I know of!) the Microsoft servers respond to "ping" requests, so the lack of response to ping from www.microsoft.com doesn't necessarily tell you anything. Try another destination for ping, such as yahoo.com or google.com. I turned on both those settings on my small domain at home (single LAN) for my Vista workstations and the "Network map" now displays and shows all of the Vista computers (before turning on these settings, I got the message that the network map was suppressed by default in the domain). The actual "map" only shows "Vista - Gateway - Internet", but the other computers (including the Windows Server 2003 R2 Domain Controller) are listed at the bottom as "The following discovered device(s) can not be placed in the map.". Have you verified that the GPO containing the settings is in fact applied to the Vista computer(s) using the gpresult command or the Group Policy Results wizard? I assume you have a check mark in the "Allow operation while in domain" check box for both settings. Also, check that the Network Discovery exception is enabled in the Windows Firewall configuration is Enabled. What do you mean by "do not get a full connection to the internet in Network and Sharing"? The only time I've seen that sort of thing (e.g. limited network connectivity) is when the computer could not get an IP address from DHCP, but then I would expect you wouldn't have domain connectivity either. My router has a built in firewall and does NAT as well, so perhaps the issue is not related to the "firewall". -- Bruce Sanderson MVP Printing http://members.shaw.ca/bsanders It is perfectly useless to know the right answer to the wrong question. "c_hr1s" wrote in message ... I am running Vista Enterprise (final version) in a domain environment I have turned on the Link-Layer Topology Discovery in local gp and domain gpo but I still get the error "Windows cannot discover any computer or device" I can browse in explorer to every machine on the network but it seems to want to communciate with microsoft.com. I also do not get a full connection to the internet in Network and Sharing Center. I can see my domain and I can connect to the internet and other PC's but when I try to repair the connection from domain to internet I get a "Windows cannot communicate with www.microsoft.com (207.46.19.30) the ping was successful but there was no response. I know this is because we are behind a Firewall but surely MS has thought of this and has a way around this? |
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Hi Bruce
Thanks for your reply ok so here goes I do have full domain connectivity, can see other pcs servers and can connect. I can connect to internet do nslookups can ping yahoo, google and msn but no response (expired in transit) which as you say is to be expected. Just seems a really weird error message to receive! All I'm actually looking to achieve is My Computer ----------------Domain----- Gateway------Internet or some recognition this is what is happening it is a shame Vista does not allow you to do this yourself. At the moment when I open up Network and Sharing Center all I see is My Computer---------------Domain----------X----------Internet It states underneath my domain that Access is Local Only When I click on the cross between Domain and Internet to repair and diagnose I get the can't get a ping response from microsoft.com error. I have turned off my Vista Firewall but Network Discovery was turned on for access and the PC is definitely getting the GPO applied I just need to somehow let Vista know that to get to the internet it is running through a proxy and and a Gateway. But for some reason it can't tell? Any other ideas? Kind Regards Christian "Bruce Sanderson" wrote: Hmm, puzzling! I don't have an exact answer, but perhaps there's something here that might give you some clues. Not sure about the "cannot discover any computers" or "do not get a full connection to the internet in Network and Sharing", but none of (well, none that I know of!) the Microsoft servers respond to "ping" requests, so the lack of response to ping from www.microsoft.com doesn't necessarily tell you anything. Try another destination for ping, such as yahoo.com or google.com. I turned on both those settings on my small domain at home (single LAN) for my Vista workstations and the "Network map" now displays and shows all of the Vista computers (before turning on these settings, I got the message that the network map was suppressed by default in the domain). The actual "map" only shows "Vista - Gateway - Internet", but the other computers (including the Windows Server 2003 R2 Domain Controller) are listed at the bottom as "The following discovered device(s) can not be placed in the map.". Have you verified that the GPO containing the settings is in fact applied to the Vista computer(s) using the gpresult command or the Group Policy Results wizard? I assume you have a check mark in the "Allow operation while in domain" check box for both settings. Also, check that the Network Discovery exception is enabled in the Windows Firewall configuration is Enabled. What do you mean by "do not get a full connection to the internet in Network and Sharing"? The only time I've seen that sort of thing (e.g. limited network connectivity) is when the computer could not get an IP address from DHCP, but then I would expect you wouldn't have domain connectivity either. My router has a built in firewall and does NAT as well, so perhaps the issue is not related to the "firewall". -- Bruce Sanderson MVP Printing http://members.shaw.ca/bsanders It is perfectly useless to know the right answer to the wrong question. "c_hr1s" wrote in message ... I am running Vista Enterprise (final version) in a domain environment I have turned on the Link-Layer Topology Discovery in local gp and domain gpo but I still get the error "Windows cannot discover any computer or device" I can browse in explorer to every machine on the network but it seems to want to communciate with microsoft.com. I also do not get a full connection to the internet in Network and Sharing Center. I can see my domain and I can connect to the internet and other PC's but when I try to repair the connection from domain to internet I get a "Windows cannot communicate with www.microsoft.com (207.46.19.30) the ping was successful but there was no response. I know this is because we are behind a Firewall but surely MS has thought of this and has a way around this? |
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Sorry, I'm not familiar with "proxy" servers etc. Here's something to try,
if you haven't already, in IE, click Tools, Internet Options, select the Connections tab, click LAN settings. There's a spot there for configuring a "proxy server". If you are in a Windows Domain, presumably the DNS server (often on the same server as the Domain Controller role) is doing the nslookups for you, so you don't need "Internet connectivity" from the Vista workstation itself to do that. I'm going to be out of town and most likely newsgroup incomunicado for about 10 days. -- Bruce Sanderson MVP Printing http://members.shaw.ca/bsanders It is perfectly useless to know the right answer to the wrong question. "c_hr1s" wrote in message news ![]() Hi Bruce Thanks for your reply ok so here goes I do have full domain connectivity, can see other pcs servers and can connect. I can connect to internet do nslookups can ping yahoo, google and msn but no response (expired in transit) which as you say is to be expected. Just seems a really weird error message to receive! All I'm actually looking to achieve is My Computer ----------------Domain----- Gateway------Internet or some recognition this is what is happening it is a shame Vista does not allow you to do this yourself. At the moment when I open up Network and Sharing Center all I see is My Computer---------------Domain----------X----------Internet It states underneath my domain that Access is Local Only When I click on the cross between Domain and Internet to repair and diagnose I get the can't get a ping response from microsoft.com error. I have turned off my Vista Firewall but Network Discovery was turned on for access and the PC is definitely getting the GPO applied I just need to somehow let Vista know that to get to the internet it is running through a proxy and and a Gateway. But for some reason it can't tell? Any other ideas? Kind Regards Christian "Bruce Sanderson" wrote: Hmm, puzzling! I don't have an exact answer, but perhaps there's something here that might give you some clues. Not sure about the "cannot discover any computers" or "do not get a full connection to the internet in Network and Sharing", but none of (well, none that I know of!) the Microsoft servers respond to "ping" requests, so the lack of response to ping from www.microsoft.com doesn't necessarily tell you anything. Try another destination for ping, such as yahoo.com or google.com. I turned on both those settings on my small domain at home (single LAN) for my Vista workstations and the "Network map" now displays and shows all of the Vista computers (before turning on these settings, I got the message that the network map was suppressed by default in the domain). The actual "map" only shows "Vista - Gateway - Internet", but the other computers (including the Windows Server 2003 R2 Domain Controller) are listed at the bottom as "The following discovered device(s) can not be placed in the map.". Have you verified that the GPO containing the settings is in fact applied to the Vista computer(s) using the gpresult command or the Group Policy Results wizard? I assume you have a check mark in the "Allow operation while in domain" check box for both settings. Also, check that the Network Discovery exception is enabled in the Windows Firewall configuration is Enabled. What do you mean by "do not get a full connection to the internet in Network and Sharing"? The only time I've seen that sort of thing (e.g. limited network connectivity) is when the computer could not get an IP address from DHCP, but then I would expect you wouldn't have domain connectivity either. My router has a built in firewall and does NAT as well, so perhaps the issue is not related to the "firewall". -- Bruce Sanderson MVP Printing http://members.shaw.ca/bsanders It is perfectly useless to know the right answer to the wrong question. "c_hr1s" wrote in message ... I am running Vista Enterprise (final version) in a domain environment I have turned on the Link-Layer Topology Discovery in local gp and domain gpo but I still get the error "Windows cannot discover any computer or device" I can browse in explorer to every machine on the network but it seems to want to communciate with microsoft.com. I also do not get a full connection to the internet in Network and Sharing Center. I can see my domain and I can connect to the internet and other PC's but when I try to repair the connection from domain to internet I get a "Windows cannot communicate with www.microsoft.com (207.46.19.30) the ping was successful but there was no response. I know this is because we are behind a Firewall but surely MS has thought of this and has a way around this? |
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Hey, future dwellers. If you've found this thread because you're getting the "Cannot communicate with www.microsoft.com" error, I finally found something for me that worked. Microsoft's 'KB937168' (http://support.microsoft.com/kb/937168) describes a Winsock bug after configuring Internet Connection Sharing, and gives a hotfix for it. You have to request it, since it's not production quality yet I guess, but they'll send you a link to it if you ask like the article describes. This worked for me, and it might work for you, too. -- pgn674 Posted via http://www.vistaheads.com |
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Thank you for sharing your experience with us.
-- Bob Lin, MS-MVP, MCSE & CNE Networking, Internet, Routing, VPN Troubleshooting on http://www.ChicagoTech.net How to Setup Windows, Network, VPN & Remote Access on http://www.HowToNetworking.com "pgn674" wrote in message news ![]() Hey, future dwellers. If you've found this thread because you're getting the "Cannot communicate with www.microsoft.com" error, I finally found something for me that worked. Microsoft's 'KB937168' (http://support.microsoft.com/kb/937168) describes a Winsock bug after configuring Internet Connection Sharing, and gives a hotfix for it. You have to request it, since it's not production quality yet I guess, but they'll send you a link to it if you ask like the article describes. This worked for me, and it might work for you, too. -- pgn674 Posted via http://www.vistaheads.com |