On Mon, Jul 12, 2010 at 02:18:00PM -0400, Richard Ryniker wrote: > The most simple (and perhaps too obvious) explanation would be your DHCP > server is not configured to respond to requests from the wired network > interace, but responds appropriately to requests from the wireless > network interface. As I wrote - all interfaces are on the same subnetwork and a DHCP server is not likely "to know" from what kind of hardware a request is coming. Again - no problems with DHCPOFFER on wireless interfaces. > It this used to work, perhaps something changed your > DHCP server's configuration file (or the location of the configuration > file). Well, no. Although it is not very likely that something like that will change by itself on a router this was one of the first things I checked. And no, a router software was NOT updated in the meantime and non-Fedora clients work like worked before. > Check to verify whether the log file on the server host shows > receipt of the wireless network request, Unfortunately there is not too much of log I can find there. > From your description, it does not appear likely to be your problem, but > on more than one occasion I found DHCP servers unexpectedly active on two > or more of my hosts. This is not the case here. At least in this moment. In any case this server is marked as "dhcp-authoritative" and you may have more that one active DHCP server on a network if they are properly configured. Michal -- test mailing list test@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx To unsubscribe: https://admin.fedoraproject.org/mailman/listinfo/test