Device can't get DHCP address on TL-SG1016PE
Hi all,
Can anyone think of a sensible reason why a raspberry pi can happily get a DHCP IP address when on ports 9-16 but not when on ports 1-8 on a TL-SG1016PE ?
(PoE disabled on the the relevant 1-8 port range)...so just standard networking
Weird - but can't think of why it might be...
It does negotiate the correct 100 Full Duplex but packets don't seem to pass.
Cheers!
- Copy Link
- Subscribe
- Bookmark
- Report Inappropriate Content
- Copy Link
- Report Inappropriate Content
Yes if I assign static IP its fine. Seems to be something weird with dhcp packets on those PoE ports only.
- Copy Link
- Report Inappropriate Content
So after checking all settings (everything was on defaults anyway) - I've done a factory reset and all is working again!
So not sure why?
Would the loop protection block do this?
If so - is there a way to see blocks and manage them?
Thanks!
- Copy Link
- Report Inappropriate Content
Loop protection will block the port when it detects a loop. If the port is blocked, the LED of the port will shows green and orange at the same time. Normally green means 1000M speed and orange means 10/100M speed. So you can check the LED to make sure whether the port is blocked by loop protection.
It seems that loop protection is enabled by default, if you want to turn off it, you need to access the management web and access the menu Monitoring > Loop Prevention. Then choose “disabled” for this function.
If the problem happens again, maybe you can confirm the port speed and your network cable quality. TL-SG1016PE is 1000M switch. If your clients support 1000M as well, the port speed should be 1000MF. So you can check if the port gets 1000MF and please note that it needs Cat5e cable at least to get 1000M.
- Copy Link
- Report Inappropriate Content
@Andone thank you - interesting to know that the LEDs are the only way to see blocking status.
I think my question should really have been not just if blocking a port would show the same symptoms as my original issue... but also ... is a block permanent on a port? If not - how is it cleared? Purely by disabling the overall option?
Thanks
- Copy Link
- Report Inappropriate Content
For loop prevention, it will send a packets periodically to detect the loop. If it find the loop disappeared, the blocking port will recover. I think your problem may not related to loop prevention as well.
About the negotiation speed, did you double confirm? I think you can make you devices get 1000MF speed then observe the problem.
- Copy Link
- Report Inappropriate Content
@Andone Thanks
I agree that the blocking is unlikely to have been the issue.
All I know is that without a change of anything physical (cables, devices, port number) that a factory reset cured the issue.
I'll probably never know what the issue was :-)
- Copy Link
- Report Inappropriate Content
- Copy Link
- Report Inappropriate Content
- Copy Link
- Report Inappropriate Content
@phil_rv Really getting a bit annoyed now... Simplest operation - plugging a NAS into an unused port and same issue as before - its as if the port is blocked... packets not getting through but connecting at 1000Full Duplex... had to factory reset again to get the port working
- Copy Link
- Report Inappropriate Content
Information
Helpful: 0
Views: 3763
Replies: 10
Voters 0
No one has voted for it yet.