Northbr1dge wrote: » Need to know a bit more. I haven't read through all of the 70-291 press book, so I'm not sure how your network is set up. Are you running VMs, or do you have a physical lab set up? Is computer1 on the domain1.local domain? Does pinging computer1 resolve to an IP address? Edit: I know these are really basic questions, and you're probably all :rolleyes: with me, but I'm just knocking the easy stuff out
crrussell3 wrote: » If you are receiving a response of Computer1 instead of Computer1.domain1.local, that means you have something incorrectly setup with DNS. Do an ipconfig /all and post the results.
Northbr1dge wrote: » See if this works: -Disable Ethernet Adapter "MyISP". -Then set your Ethernet Adapter "Local Area Connection" DNS server to be your domain controller. This is just to isolate the issue, mind you. I'm sure eventually you're gonna want that outside line to your ISP up and working again, but for right now lets see what this accomplishes. Ninja Edit: Where are you trying to ping computer1 from? The DC?
27 wrote: » Lease Expires . . . . . . . . . . : 27 January 1904 14:04:25\>
rage_hog wrote: » Dont know how your going to ping anything, looks like everything you have there is on a diff subnet.
undomiel wrote: » It seems like you don't have DNS set. You'll want to configure that so that it will be able to resolve the computer name by DNS instead of netbios broadcasts. It also looks like your DC isn't pointing to itself for DNS which is something else you would want to fix.
crrussell3 wrote: » Agreed. You haven't configured DNS on either network adapter. Make sure that both your DC and your member server point to your DC for DNS.
27 wrote: » Have any of you actually got the MS press book please? While I appreciate your support, my point is that I've done everything the book has asked me to do so far but something isn't right. The member server is set to obtain DNS server address automatically.