![]() |
|
Welcome to Vista Banter. You are currently viewing our boards as a guest which gives you limited access to view most discussions, articles and access our other FREE features. By joining our free community you will have access to ask questions and reply to others posts, upload your own photos and access many other special features. Registration is fast, simple and absolutely free so please, join our community today! If you have any problems with the registration process or your account login, please contact contact support. |
|
|||||||
| Networking with Windows Vista Networking issues and questions with Windows Vista. (microsoft.public.windows.vista.networking_sharing) |
|
|
|
LinkBack | Thread Tools | Display Modes |
|
|||
|
Can anyone tell me why plugging in a CAT-5 cable to my Vista SP1
machine's port will NOT bring up my LAN? The stupid "diagnose" button simply tells me to "turn on wireless". This is of absolutely NO help because my wireless access point is temporarily down. Is there NO way to force a wired connection with Vista? Using the "connect to a network" link is useless also as it also assumes you want wireless - not wired. In XP you used to have a choice of wireless or wired. Has that also been taken away by the brilliant programmers at Microsoft? GP |
|
|||
|
Grand_Poobah wrote:
Can anyone tell me why plugging in a CAT-5 cable to my Vista SP1 machine's port will NOT bring up my LAN? The stupid "diagnose" button simply tells me to "turn on wireless". This is of absolutely NO help because my wireless access point is temporarily down. Is there NO way to force a wired connection with Vista? Using the "connect to a network" link is useless also as it also assumes you want wireless - not wired. In XP you used to have a choice of wireless or wired. Has that also been taken away by the brilliant programmers at Microsoft? I understand that you are upset and ranting feels good but it does limit how many people will respond to you. Just sayin'... You've also left out all the details that would enable people to help you. Here are some of the things we need to know: 1. How do you connect to the Internet? Cable? DSL? 2. Is the cable/DSL modem a combination modem/router or do you have a router plugged into the modem's WAN port? 3. If you have a separate router, what is it? 4. Are you plugging the ethernet cable into the router? If yes, have you tried plugging the ethernet cable directly to the modem, bypassing the router 5. Have you power-cycled both the modem and the router and then tried again? 6. Can other computers on the LAN access the Internet? 7. The Alternate Configuration is for when you want to have two unrelated setups for Internet access on one adapter, not for "forcing" wired access. Example - if you need a static IP address at work and a dynamic IP address at home. 8. What have you already tried? 9. Did this ever work? If yes, what changed? 10. Is the ethernet adapter enabled? Look in Device Manager to be sure. (Actually this is the first thing you should check but I don't feel like renumbering my entire reply.) Malke -- MS-MVP Elephant Boy Computers - Don't Panic! FAQ - http://www.elephantboycomputers.com/#FAQ |
|
|||
|
There is nothing better than a good rant. Why spoil it with good advice.
Replies inline. --- Grand_Poobah wrote: Can anyone tell me why plugging in a CAT-5 cable to my Vista SP1 machine's port will NOT bring up my LAN? The stupid "diagnose" button simply tells me to "turn on wireless". This is of absolutely NO help because my wireless access point is temporarily down. Is there NO way to force a wired connection with Vista? Using the "connect to a network" link is useless also as it also assumes you want wireless - not wired. In XP you used to have a choice of wireless or wired. Has that also been taken away by the brilliant programmers at Microsoft? I understand that you are upset and ranting feels good but it does limit how many people will respond to you. Just sayin'... You've also left out all the details that would enable people to help you. Here are some of the things we need to know: 1. How do you connect to the Internet? Cable? DSL? DSL. Other computer connect just fine - even after I switched cables with the nearest one. 2. Is the cable/DSL modem a combination modem/router or do you have a router plugged into the modem's WAN port? DSL modem - Linksys Router - patch panel in basement - computer room upstairs - local hub - four computers 3. If you have a separate router, what is it? Linksys 4. Are you plugging the ethernet cable into the router? If yes, have you tried plugging the ethernet cable directly to the modem, bypassing the router See #2 5. Have you power-cycled both the modem and the router and then tried again? Not part of the problem. Other computers running fine. 6. Can other computers on the LAN access the Internet? Yes 7. The Alternate Configuration is for when you want to have two unrelated setups for Internet access on one adapter, not for "forcing" wired access. Example - if you need a static IP address at work and a dynamic IP address at home. I can find no alternate configuration setup anywhere. I use static IP address on my LAN. I used to have DHCP but the router kept double-assigning addresses at times. On the laptop, I have tried several times to create a completely new connection using the wired adapter but cannot find out how to start any sort of wizard to do that. When my wireless A/P is working, I can connect wireless just fine, but when I turn the wireless adapter off and plug in the cable SOMETIMES it will connect, but it uses the name of my wireless setup on the info pop-up over the notification icon for my LAN. This doesn't sound right to me. There should be some way of setting up a wired connection from scratch. 8. What have you already tried? A load of IPCONFIG commands. rebooting, several times. plugging and unplugging the cable (connect LED goes on and off + port LED on hub goes on and off also). 9. Did this ever work? If yes, what changed? Yes; nothing. Worked last night, but not this AM when turned on (and rebooted three times) 10. Is the ethernet adapter enabled? Look in Device Manager to be sure. (Actually this is the first thing you should check but I don't feel like renumbering my entire reply.) Device manager shows all is fine - even with "show hidden devices" enabled. No flags. Malke There are a couple of things in the Event Viewer, but I'm not sure if they relate. They are COM+ events though: QUOTE The application-specific permission settings do not grant Local Launch permission for the COM Server application with CLSID {C97FCC79-E628-407D-AE68-A06AD6D8B4D1} to the user NT AUTHORITY\SYSTEM SID (S-1-5-18) from address LocalHost (Using LRPC). This security permission can be modified using the Component Services administrative tool. /QUOTE I looked up the ClassID and it turns out to be "local launch permission" for an IPDevice. This could possibly be the culprit. I ran the Component Services applet and took a look at all the COM items (big list) but couldn't find any security issues out of order. If there is a connection between the CLSID and a particular device (without searching each and every COM device in order) I sure wish I could find it. Searching the Registry is my only recourse. GP |
|
|||
|
Grand_Poobah wrote:
See my comments inline: 1. How do you connect to the Internet? Cable? DSL? DSL. Other computer connect just fine - even after I switched cables with the nearest one. 2. Is the cable/DSL modem a combination modem/router or do you have a router plugged into the modem's WAN port? DSL modem - Linksys Router - patch panel in basement - computer room upstairs - local hub - four computers 3. If you have a separate router, what is it? Linksys Linksys what? Have you checked with Linksys to see if this router supports Vista? If it is very old it may not. Does it have the latest firmware? Routers doing DHCP do not normally assign duplicate IP addresses and this points to something being wrong. Or if the router is elderly it may just be dying. Are you really using a hub or a switch? If a hub, replace it with a switch. Hubs are very old technology and can cause issues on a LAN. Switches are inexpensive. 4. Are you plugging the ethernet cable into the router? If yes, have you tried plugging the ethernet cable directly to the modem, bypassing the router See #2 I don't see where you answered this so I take it that no, you haven't plugged the Vista machine directly into the modem with ethernet. I would do so. Successful troubleshooting must be systematic and not scattershot. 5. Have you power-cycled both the modem and the router and then tried again? Not part of the problem. Other computers running fine. You don't know if this is part of the problem or not unless you've tested it. Again, when troubleshooting you must be systematic. But leave it for now. 6. Can other computers on the LAN access the Internet? Yes 7. The Alternate Configuration is for when you want to have two unrelated setups for Internet access on one adapter, not for "forcing" wired access. Example - if you need a static IP address at work and a dynamic IP address at home. I can find no alternate configuration setup anywhere. I use static IP address on my LAN. I used to have DHCP but the router kept double-assigning addresses at times. On the laptop, I have tried several times to create a completely new connection using the wired adapter but cannot find out how to start any sort of wizard to do that. When my wireless A/P is working, I can connect wireless just fine, but when I turn the wireless adapter off and plug in the cable SOMETIMES it will connect, but it uses the name of my wireless setup on the info pop-up over the notification icon for my LAN. This doesn't sound right to me. There should be some way of setting up a wired connection from scratch. You don't need the Alternate Configuration if you've assigned static IP addresses and turned off the Linksys's doing DHCP. 8. What have you already tried? A load of IPCONFIG commands. rebooting, several times. plugging and unplugging the cable (connect LED goes on and off + port LED on hub goes on and off also). 9. Did this ever work? If yes, what changed? Yes; nothing. Worked last night, but not this AM when turned on (and rebooted three times) Possible hardware failure then rather than software. What happens when you connect the Vista laptop directly to your modem? If nothing, then there may be a problem with the laptop's NIC. 10. Is the ethernet adapter enabled? Look in Device Manager to be sure. (Actually this is the first thing you should check but I don't feel like renumbering my entire reply.) Device manager shows all is fine - even with "show hidden devices" enabled. No flags. There are a couple of things in the Event Viewer, but I'm not sure if they relate. They are COM+ events though: QUOTE The application-specific permission settings do not grant Local Launch permission for the COM Server application with CLSID {C97FCC79-E628-407D-AE68-A06AD6D8B4D1} to the user NT AUTHORITY\SYSTEM SID (S-1-5-18) from address LocalHost (Using LRPC). This security permission can be modified using the Component Services administrative tool. /QUOTE I looked up the ClassID and it turns out to be "local launch permission" for an IPDevice. This could possibly be the culprit. I ran the Component Services applet and took a look at all the COM items (big list) but couldn't find any security issues out of order. If there is a connection between the CLSID and a particular device (without searching each and every COM device in order) I sure wish I could find it. Searching the Registry is my only recourse. If you do a Google search using this search term, "permission settings do not grant Local Launch permission for the COM Server application" you will get a lot of links about that error message. I would not go chasing after it at this point but rather would do the troubleshooting I suggest above first. If your Vista machine's NIC has died or you are using an old hub or your router has a problem, solving that will probably resolve the error in Event Viewer. Malke -- MS-MVP Elephant Boy Computers - Don't Panic! FAQ - http://www.elephantboycomputers.com/#FAQ |
|
|||
|
DSL modem - Linksys Router - patch panel in basement - computer room upstairs - local hub - four computers You're still using a HUB? Or do you mean switch? I used to have DHCP but the router kept double-assigning addresses at times. This is troubling. Does it still do this? If so then there's plenty of reasons to be HIGHLY skeptical of the network setup. Just because some other boxes "work" doesn't mean there isn't something else wrong. On the laptop, I have tried several times to create a completely new connection using the wired adapter but cannot find out how to start any sort of wizard to do that. Disable the adapter in the device manager, the remove it. Reboot and allow it to set it back up again. It may be advantageous to also delete that interface from the registry in-between the removal from the device manager and the reboot. When my wireless A/P is working, I can connect wireless just fine, but when I turn the wireless adapter off Turn off, how? Here you may have driver issues with the wireless interface. What make/model/version is it? Also, since this is a laptop, does it have trouble maintain connections when the machine goes to sleep or when waking back up from standby or hibernate? -Bill Kearney |
|
|||
|
---
Grand_Poobah wrote: See my comments inline: 1. How do you connect to the Internet? Cable? DSL? DSL. Other computer connect just fine - even after I switched cables with the nearest one. 2. Is the cable/DSL modem a combination modem/router or do you have a router plugged into the modem's WAN port? DSL modem - Linksys Router - patch panel in basement - computer room upstairs - local hub - four computers 3. If you have a separate router, what is it? Linksys Linksys what? Have you checked with Linksys to see if this router supports Vista? If it is very old it may not. Does it have the latest firmware? Routers doing DHCP do not normally assign duplicate IP addresses and this points to something being wrong. Or if the router is elderly it may just be dying. Are you really using a hub or a switch? If a hub, replace it with a switch. Hubs are very old technology and can cause issues on a LAN. Switches are inexpensive. 4. Are you plugging the ethernet cable into the router? If yes, have you tried plugging the ethernet cable directly to the modem, bypassing the router See #2 I don't see where you answered this so I take it that no, you haven't plugged the Vista machine directly into the modem with ethernet. I would do so. Successful troubleshooting must be systematic and not scattershot. 5. Have you power-cycled both the modem and the router and then tried again? Not part of the problem. Other computers running fine. You don't know if this is part of the problem or not unless you've tested it. Again, when troubleshooting you must be systematic. But leave it for now. 6. Can other computers on the LAN access the Internet? Yes 7. The Alternate Configuration is for when you want to have two unrelated setups for Internet access on one adapter, not for "forcing" wired access. Example - if you need a static IP address at work and a dynamic IP address at home. I can find no alternate configuration setup anywhere. I use static IP address on my LAN. I used to have DHCP but the router kept double-assigning addresses at times. On the laptop, I have tried several times to create a completely new connection using the wired adapter but cannot find out how to start any sort of wizard to do that. When my wireless A/P is working, I can connect wireless just fine, but when I turn the wireless adapter off and plug in the cable SOMETIMES it will connect, but it uses the name of my wireless setup on the info pop-up over the notification icon for my LAN. This doesn't sound right to me. There should be some way of setting up a wired connection from scratch. You don't need the Alternate Configuration if you've assigned static IP addresses and turned off the Linksys's doing DHCP. 8. What have you already tried? A load of IPCONFIG commands. rebooting, several times. plugging and unplugging the cable (connect LED goes on and off + port LED on hub goes on and off also). 9. Did this ever work? If yes, what changed? Yes; nothing. Worked last night, but not this AM when turned on (and rebooted three times) Possible hardware failure then rather than software. What happens when you connect the Vista laptop directly to your modem? If nothing, then there may be a problem with the laptop's NIC. 10. Is the ethernet adapter enabled? Look in Device Manager to be sure. (Actually this is the first thing you should check but I don't feel like renumbering my entire reply.) Device manager shows all is fine - even with "show hidden devices" enabled. No flags. There are a couple of things in the Event Viewer, but I'm not sure if they relate. They are COM+ events though: QUOTE The application-specific permission settings do not grant Local Launch permission for the COM Server application with CLSID {C97FCC79-E628-407D-AE68-A06AD6D8B4D1} to the user NT AUTHORITY\SYSTEM SID (S-1-5-18) from address LocalHost (Using LRPC). This security permission can be modified using the Component Services administrative tool. /QUOTE I looked up the ClassID and it turns out to be "local launch permission" for an IPDevice. This could possibly be the culprit. I ran the Component Services applet and took a look at all the COM items (big list) but couldn't find any security issues out of order. If there is a connection between the CLSID and a particular device (without searching each and every COM device in order) I sure wish I could find it. Searching the Registry is my only recourse. If you do a Google search using this search term, "permission settings do not grant Local Launch permission for the COM Server application" you will get a lot of links about that error message. I would not go chasing after it at this point but rather would do the troubleshooting I suggest above first. If your Vista machine's NIC has died or you are using an old hub or your router has a problem, solving that will probably resolve the error in Event Viewer. Malke I uninstalled the computer's adapter (NVIDIAnForce 10/100/1000 Adapter) rebooted and re-installed the adapter. Through three reboots now it has connected every time. Each reboot was checked with an online site for access. I intend to see if NVIDIA has any updated or newer drivers for this adapter. The 'hub' I mentioned is actually a D-Link 10/100 Fast Ethernet Switch. It may be two years old, if that. The router is a Linksys BEFSX41 Firewall Router (with firewall activated). The DSL modem is a SpeedStream 5100 (5-LED model). According to the Linksys site, I have the latest firmware for my router and, I point out, it works just fine with all my other computers (which, in itself, is not a completely valid argument that it is working for the laptop). I took the laptop downstairs and (with a lot of plugging and unplugging) got it hooked directly to the modem - no connection showing on the laptop. The laptop still claimed that there were no networks available. Next step: email NVIDIA tech support and see if there are any updated drivers higher than 67.7.6.1 for my network adapter. Their web site is set up totally for video drivers and doesn't show any network adapters in their product list (strange?). I will also check with HP to see if they have any. GP |
|
|||
|
---
DSL modem - Linksys Router - patch panel in basement - computer room upstairs - local hub - four computers You're still using a HUB? Or do you mean switch? I used to have DHCP but the router kept double-assigning addresses at times. This is troubling. Does it still do this? If so then there's plenty of reasons to be HIGHLY skeptical of the network setup. Just because some other boxes "work" doesn't mean there isn't something else wrong. On the laptop, I have tried several times to create a completely new connection using the wired adapter but cannot find out how to start any sort of wizard to do that. Disable the adapter in the device manager, the remove it. Reboot and allow it to set it back up again. It may be advantageous to also delete that interface from the registry in-between the removal from the device manager and the reboot. When my wireless A/P is working, I can connect wireless just fine, but when I turn the wireless adapter off Turn off, how? Here you may have driver issues with the wireless interface. What make/model/version is it? Also, since this is a laptop, does it have trouble maintain connections when the machine goes to sleep or when waking back up from standby or hibernate? -Bill Kearney Hi Bill. See my answers to Malke. There is a button right on the computer panel next to the power switch that turns off (actually it 'disables') the WLAN adapter. It goes from green (0n) to orange (Off). The router DHCP agent would occasionally assign a just-booting computer an address of one of my other computers. When I troubleshot this odd occurrence, I found that the assigned IP address was usually that of the computer that had been on the longest. Some of my computers stay on for weeks at a time and just renew their leases. By flashing the firmware of the router that problem was eliminated but I had already shifted to static IP addresses. My motto - if it works don't mess with it, but if it doesn't, find out why. I read on a forum about another person having this similar problem and he solved it by disabling then removing the wired adapter using Program Manager. Then cut/pasted the drivers to his desktop for safekeeping. After rebooting, he found that Vista had assigned one of Microsoft's drivers to the adapter and he had no more problems. I may try that next if this arrangement (uninstall and reinstall of NVIDIA drivers) works. My laptop has had no wireless problems with dropout or with sleep/hibernation. I can put it to sleep and wake up and the adapter connects right away. I went into it's settings and didn't allow the computer to 'put it to sleep' under any circumstances. Maybe that helped. I guess what is bothering me the most is that there isn't TWO separate connections I can set up for network access - one for wireless and one for wired. Every time I try "set up a network" the first thing it tells me is that there are no wireless networks available. Well, who cares? I want wired. All this hassle will go away once I get a new Wireless Access Point. My old one started heating up badly. GP |
|
|||
|
"Grand_Poobah" wrote in message
... Next step: email NVIDIA tech support and see if there are any updated drivers higher than 67.7.6.1 for my network adapter. Their web site is set up totally for video drivers and doesn't show any network adapters in their product list (strange?). Not at all. AFAIK NVIDIA make graphics cards, not Network adapters. -- Asking a question? Please tell us the version of the application you are asking about, your OS, Service Pack level and the FULL contents of any error message(s) |
|
|||
|
---
"Grand_Poobah" wrote in message ... Next step: email NVIDIA tech support and see if there are any updated drivers higher than 67.7.6.1 for my network adapter. Their web site is set up totally for video drivers and doesn't show any network adapters in their product list (strange?). Not at all. AFAIK NVIDIA make graphics cards, not Network adapters. That's what I though also Gordon but Device Manager doggedly insists that my two adapters a Atheros AR5009 802.11a/g/n WiFi Adapter NVIDIAnForce 10/100/1000 Mbps Networking Controller I cannot find anything anywhere relating to the NVIDIA networking device other than some Google hits reporting some similar problems as those I am having. I suppose it is possible that it is 'spoofing' (for lack of a better word) DM and reporting it is a network controller but why will it connect to the web then? I think this may have been some sort of experiment by NVIDIA into the networking arena and the drivers just don't work right. The next thing is to try and remove the NVIDIA drivers totally (backing them up somewhere safe) and see if I can reboot and have Vista assign different drivers to it. I do have an NVIDIA GeForce 8200G M video card in the laptop also. GP |
|
|||
|
Grand_Poobah wrote:
--- "Grand_Poobah" wrote in message ... Next step: email NVIDIA tech support and see if there are any updated drivers higher than 67.7.6.1 for my network adapter. Their web site is set up totally for video drivers and doesn't show any network adapters in their product list (strange?). Not at all. AFAIK NVIDIA make graphics cards, not Network adapters. That's what I though also Gordon but Device Manager doggedly insists that my two adapters a Atheros AR5009 802.11a/g/n WiFi Adapter NVIDIAnForce 10/100/1000 Mbps Networking Controller I cannot find anything anywhere relating to the NVIDIA networking device other than some Google hits reporting some similar problems as those I am having. I suppose it is possible that it is 'spoofing' (for lack of a better word) DM and reporting it is a network controller but why will it connect to the web then? I think this may have been some sort of experiment by NVIDIA into the networking arena and the drivers just don't work right. The next thing is to try and remove the NVIDIA drivers totally (backing them up somewhere safe) and see if I can reboot and have Vista assign different drivers to it. I do have an NVIDIA GeForce 8200G M video card in the laptop also. Nvidia makes motherboards and on those motherboards are onboard network adapters. Just as a WAG, did you also install the Nvidia Firewall that sometimes comes along with those adapter drivers? If yes, I'd uninstall that. You may be getting conflicts with the Windows Firewall. I also forgot to ask you what security software you have installed. I've seen instances where a client had McAfee (shudder!) installed and that program was blocking the ethernet adapter. You said: "I uninstalled the computer's adapter (NVIDIAnForce 10/100/1000 Adapter) rebooted and re-installed the adapter. Through three reboots now it has connected every time. Each reboot was checked with an online site for access. I intend to see if NVIDIA has any updated or newer drivers for this adapter." So does this mean that the wired NIC is now working? If it is, leave well enough alone! Malke -- MS-MVP Elephant Boy Computers - Don't Panic! FAQ - http://www.elephantboycomputers.com/#FAQ |
|
| Thread Tools | |
| Display Modes | |
|
|