I want to know what Windows update provoked this issue. The IT department I work for is upgrading to Vista sometime Q1 of 2008. I have given Vista many chances in the past, but thought I would try working through my issues this time... for the sake of experience. This issue is, by far, one of the most perplexing and frustrating issues I've EVER had to troubleshoot. I've tried every solution posted to this thread. Unfortunately, none of them work. What strikes me as very odd, is DHCP was working flawlessly yesterday. Now, I cannot resolve an address from any network (including my Sprint Novatel U720, which is supposed to be Vista compatible). I started fearing that my hardware might be to blame... So like any concerned user, I downloaded Ubuntu 7.10 and threw it in. Everything works fine.
Has anyone (even Microsoft) determined the cause of this issue? I feel it should be receiving much more attention than it is. I am truly shocked that Microsoft would allow an issue like this last so long.
What was wrong with Winsock in XP? It worked fine! Why did they feel the need to destroy it?
Any fixes or solutions at all would be great. I really love the aesthetics of Vista. The OS X-like features and thought that went into most of the OS (less Networking...) are great improvements on XP, but seriously, I need mah internet.
Fixes I've Tried:
*"Windows Vista cannot obtain an IP address from certain routers or
from certain non-Microsoft DHCP servers" (Translation: Broadcast flag
handling is broken).
<http://support.microsoft.com/kb/928233>
*"The default gateway setting is lost when you wake a Windows
Vista-based computer from sleep" (Translation: IP stack parameters
are being tweaked when going in/out of sleep mode)
<http://support.microsoft.com/kb/933872>
*"Windows Vista cannot connect to any off-link addresses when the
default gateway is configured to be the same as the client IP address"
(Translation: A commonly used method of preserving IP addresses is
broken).
<http://support.microsoft.com/kb/929824/en-us>
*"When a DHCP server is unavailable on a Windows Vista-based computer,
Windows Vista uses an APIPA IP address much sooner than Windows XP
does under the same circumstances"
<http://support.microsoft.com/kb/931550/en-us>
*"You cannot use a remote access server to apply DHCP options to a
Windows Vista-based computer" (Translation: Can't reliably get DHCP
leases through a VPN).
<http://support.microsoft.com/kb/933340/en-us>
---I tried their additional advice; adding keys for other interfaces, like wlan and ethernet
*There are a mess of other DHCP related "issues" (bugs) in the
knowledge pile at:
<http://support.microsoft.com/search/default.aspx?query=vista+dhcp>
(Thanks to Jeff Liebermann, 09/07/07 via google groups discussion...)
*Restoring to a point before all updates (in fact, I tried every single restore point available. Vista has only been loaded for 1 day.)
*Reloading hardware drivers
*Testing network connectivity with other devices (I'm using one right now...)
*Assigning static IP address on the network - this promoted me to Full Local Access, but still no internet
*netsh int ip reset <log.txt> - rebuild TCP/IP
*netsh interface tcp set global autotuninglevel=normal (i tried disabled and high too...)
*I've tried all registry hacks. I even tried the lovely tool developed by a thread subscriber.
The only things I haven't tried are:
*Loading XP
*Reinstalling Vista
*Teabagging the laptop (i.e., dunking it in a tub of water.)
I'm going to try reinstalling Vista. This issue is not one I've experienced in my past 2-5-day-before-reverting-to-OSX-or-XP-or-Ubuntu sessions. I have a feeling that one of the Vista Security Patches or HotFixes is responsible for this problem. *If someone knows, please provide your insight!!!!*
Thank you all; Mostly, thank you daniweb for this discussion forum. It's great!
Last edited by mpeters13; Dec 30th, 2007 at 3:46 pm. Reason: Added other solutions I've attempted.