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#1
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The TCP/IP protocol will not bind to anything. It is
shown as a component in network configuration but with no bindings. We have tried removing all network components, removing drvdata.bin/drvidex.bin (as MS KB article 295085) but TCP/IP protocol (unbound) always appears without having to re-install. How can we force it to re-install and bind to dial-up adaptor/realtek 8139 network card? (It was all working fine but seems to have become corrupted whilst installing an SBS 4.5 client) John John |
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#2
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In article <040501c36d56$d5cef0f0$(E-Mail Removed)>, "John"
<(E-Mail Removed)> wrote: >The TCP/IP protocol will not bind to anything. It is >shown as a component in network configuration but with no >bindings. We have tried removing all network components, >removing drvdata.bin/drvidex.bin (as MS KB article 295085) >but TCP/IP protocol (unbound) always appears without >having to re-install. > >How can we force it to re-install and bind to dial-up >adaptor/realtek 8139 network card? > >(It was all working fine but seems to have become >corrupted whilst installing an SBS 4.5 client) > >John There might not be a problem. Have you tried using TCP/IP anyway? If the computer only has one network adapter, it won't show the TCP/IP binding explicitly. For example: Client for Microsoft Networks Realtek 8139 TCP/IP File and Printer Sharing If the computer has more than one network adapter, it will show the bindings explicitly. For example: Client for Microsoft Networks Dial-Up Adapter Realtek 8139 TCP/IP -> Dial-Up Adapter TCP/IP -> Realtek 8139 File and Printer Sharing Go to Start | Run | Winipcfg and see if it shows the TCP/IP properties for the Realtek card. If it does, everything should be working. -- Best Wishes, Steve Winograd, MS-MVP (Windows Networking) Please post any reply as a follow-up message in the news group for everyone to see. I'm sorry, but I don't answer questions addressed directly to me in E-mail or news groups. Microsoft Most Valuable Professional - Windows Networking http://mvp.support.microsoft.com Steve Winograd's Networking FAQ http://www.bcmaven.com/networking/faq.htm |
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#3
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In article <017f01c36d7c$3bdd5880$(E-Mail Removed)>, "John"
<(E-Mail Removed)> wrote: >Thanks Steve > >I'll try that tomorrow (the machine is not at this site). >Perhaps the problem is elsewhere (ie not the bindings)but >a PING to the server produces an immediate 'destination >host unreachable'. The network card appears to be working >correctly and the full network logon appears (ie,user, >password, domain) > >John I'm sure that TCP/IP is bound to the network card. Otherwise, the PING would give a different error message. "Destination host unreachable" means that TCP/IP is working, but it doesn't know how to send packets to the address that you're pinging, i.e. there's no matching route in the route table. You can use this command to write the route table to a file: route print >route.txt -- Best Wishes, Steve Winograd, MS-MVP (Windows Networking) Please post any reply as a follow-up message in the news group for everyone to see. I'm sorry, but I don't answer questions addressed directly to me in E-mail or news groups. Microsoft Most Valuable Professional - Windows Networking http://mvp.support.microsoft.com Steve Winograd's Networking FAQ http://www.bcmaven.com/networking/faq.htm |
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| Tags |
| bindings, missing, tcp or ip |
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