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03-08-2013 03:11 PM
Vodafone - in case you ever read this or respond to the tickets I have raised.
I have NOT moved house. I have NOT changed the position or use of my Sure Signal (it has remained in its place since I moved in over 3 years ago). I HAVE updated the network in my home which means that your device may have updated its IP address - this is a standard thing that happens when a device uses DHCP over which I have no control. I DO NOT need countless wretched texts and emails telling me to update it's location which I have done once.
Lack of proper network knowledge on your part does not constitute a demand for action on mine.
Stop annoying me!
05-08-2013 09:01 PM
06-08-2013 12:11 AM
I am really suprised to hear that, unless your router is dishing out public facing IPs, if it is in a private range and being NAT'd nto the public addres, the target destination will only see the public IP, that is the whole point of NAT.
However if you are routing public addresses out through a central address that is totally different, but with a reasonable DHCP server in place (even windows default can do it, and the majority of home routers) allocating a MAC to a static address that it picks up every renew is possible and could fix things.
Without knowing the exact setup and routing it is hard to tell exactly what is going on, but I have recently had the same suresignal connected to the same router, on 4 different IP addresses (all 192.168.1.xxx) and it reconnected fine each time (laptop/desktop(s)/sure signal booting in different orders after a reset)
06-08-2013 08:07 AM
07-08-2013 12:20 AM
This is actually hurting my head working out what is or isn't going on.
As far as MACs are concerned, nothing to do with VF or any orther device, they only talk point to point and that is how the transport layer works.
Between VF's servers and the SS will be 6-12 routers, each having their own MACs and each only caring about the device they immediatly talk to.
The SS MAC is ONLY published to the router. Its IP is only cared about by the router, as the router should then pass the traff on as if it was it's own.
If there is something wrong in the local setup that causes things to be passed on outside the normal NAT protocols then that is something to investigate, but I cannot think as to why a private IP change would upset anything - and I am willing to be proven wrong here as a learning experience.
Are there any VPNs or other private networking going on in the remote areas that could cause the SS to connect to the internet via somewhere else and thus show as a remote IP?