[Q] Change device id for wifi? - EVO 4G Q&A, Help & Troubleshooting

My wife and I both have evo's. When at home on wifi my netgear wgr614v7 router seems to have issues connecting both properly. It seems to be a device name problem. Both phones have the same name, different mac addresses but the router us giving them both the same ip address. I have setup static routes to each phone, which helps get different ip's, but I'm still having connection problems with one phone when both are being used.
Is there a way to change the name that my evo broadcasts to my router?
Hers is stock and I am using Fresh's rom.

travlincablguy said:
I have setup static routes to each phone, which helps get different ip's
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
They will anyway get different IP's (I'm talking about private IP 192.168.*.*), for device id maybe someone can edit that in .wireless tether .apk for you because as far I can see that part is kind of integrated and hidden inside.

I am not using the tether function. The static route I setup ensures that every time my evo with it's mac address ending in :d2 always gets 192.168.0.6, Heather's phone is always .3.
Thanks for your input, but I don't think you understood what I was asking.

travlincablguy said:
My wife and I both have evo's. When at home on wifi my netgear wgr614v7 router seems to have issues connecting both properly. It seems to be a device name problem. Both phones have the same name, different mac addresses but the router us giving them both the same ip address. I have setup static routes to each phone, which helps get different ip's, but I'm still having connection problems with one phone when both are being used.
Is there a way to change the name that my evo broadcasts to my router?
Hers is stock and I am using Fresh's rom.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I'm thinking you could change the device name in the build.prop in the system folder.

Ahhah, thank you sir, I will look into that.
Edit: after looking threw build.prop I could not find the device id. Which is a bummer. I finally talked my wife out of her iphone and she is now a bit pissy about not being able to use the internet at the same time. No 3 or 4g service at the house either. We have to use an airrave to talk on the phone.

What's the device name in your router?
Also, FWIW, your router shouldn't have any problems with two different MAC addresses connecting. DHCP ID is irrelevant. It sounds more like your problem is a bad router, you're on the edge of its range, or there's something deeper wrong (ie, some other piece of network hardware). As far as I know, you can't change the DHCP Client ID on the phone. It's always been android_(sting of letters/numbers) for me, and it correlates with the Exchange device ID (if you use an Exchange account).

That is the id that shows up. I am thinking the router needs to go. I cannot live without any of the devices that I have connected to it. I do appreciate your insight.

Heh, you good sir are in luck:
http://review.cyanogenmod.com/#change,2164
http://review.cyanogenmod.com/#change,2165
CyanogenMod 7 ('unno about 6) just got a feature to let you change the DHCP client ID.

Related

MAC Address Changing with every Reset?

Just updated my HD7 to the update with internet sharing. After this, I can confirm that every time I reboot my phone, I get a new mac address. Which prevents me from connecting to my MAC-address-filtered wifi. I've done it 6 times and gotten 6 unique MAC addresses.
Does this happen to anyone else's phone? HD7 specific? or all phones with internet sharing? My internet sharing is turned off.
That's strange, I've never heard of a device with a dynamic MAC address before. Does your phone have one printed under the battery?
Nope, just IMEI, SN and PN. No MAC address.
This must be related in internet sharing somehow.
silvertonesx24 said:
Does this happen to anyone else's phone? HD7 specific? or all phones with internet sharing? My internet sharing is turned off.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I can confirm this on my HD7.
MAC changes on every reboot.
I confirm too,i have the issue of mac adress changing every reboot
& my wifi is not visible since the update,My wifi is N and i can only see wifi G near me but not mine
hi
for me too : mac adress change after shutdown.
for time don't shutdown the phone to have same mac adress with my internet box.
htc support tell me that they will answer on monday.
but i think it's a big problem with this update...
Ben
That's a bit strange. Normally you can't change MAC's for yourself, only spoofing is possible. If WP is really changing the MAC adress with every reboot, WP needs a valid MAC adress block licensed from IEEE, otherwise it would be a violation against IEEE.
I thought mac address we're never aloud to change!?
Lol that's illegal as all hell, a dynamic mac address
Gotta be a glitch in the firmware surely? No way that's allowed. Your definitely sure it's not a dynamic IP address you're seeing?
Sent from my SGH-i917 using Board Express
ive also asked this question a couple of days ago right after applying the htc internet sharing update. and ive posted my question here (entry #38) and people provided good answers about it. hope this helps
Yes, mine also changes it's only when i read this thread and test my hd7 and i notice the changes.But I S is a breeze.
The issue is that some people assign static IPs to devices on their home networks, and this is done in most routers via MAC address coupling (MAC a always gets IP z and so forth). That way you can simply block all devices you and people in the residence do not own. I do it on all my machines for development reasons, cause I like knowing I can always use x IP address to get at a certain machine even if I turn it off or it's down for a while for repairs. The IP never changes as long as I continue to use that specific network card in the computer.
I don't know why they would do that. Perhaps for security reasons?
I have the same problem - cannot connect to my University WiFi network as the MAC address keeps on changing....
This is crazy!
They better get on that quick! They could get in a lot of **** for that
putting aside the weird WP7 behaviour for the moment...
MAC filtering is useless as a security measure. It's trivially spoofable by anyone who actually wants to attack your network, and causes a pain in the arse for yourself. do yourself a favour and disable it already. the only thing it might be good for is router-side internet access control of your technically challenged 8 year old who doesn't know how to use google.
just use a strong password i.e. 20+ characters alpha (upper & lower) + numeric + special characters, and proper wireless security (WPA-2 AES, or at least WPA AES) and you'll be just fine.
Confirming
That update was a bag full of $$$$ !Luckly I was able to restore through Zune,but my Bootloader (SPL) was also updated to 5.01 and no way of going back!
With regards to the missing WiFi network - make sure it's not using Channel 13. The new update seems to disable the use of Channel 13 for some reason.
There is also another issue with the changing MAC's - I believe that some "public" WiFi networks such as the cloud use the MAC to remember your device and allow it to connect...
primexx said:
putting aside the weird WP7 behaviour for the moment...
MAC filtering is useless as a security measure. It's trivially spoofable by anyone who actually wants to attack your network, and causes a pain in the arse for yourself. do yourself a favour and disable it already. the only thing it might be good for is router-side internet access control of your technically challenged 8 year old who doesn't know how to use google.
just use a strong password i.e. 20+ characters alpha (upper & lower) + numeric + special characters, and proper wireless security (WPA-2 AES, or at least WPA AES) and you'll be just fine.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Mac filtering is not useless as a security measure. It's not used by itself. It's used in conjunction with other methods, the same way businesses also hide their wireless network's SSID.
I'm not filtering on an Open Connection. That would be retarded.
Seriously...
GrahamWager said:
With regards to the missing WiFi network - make sure it's not using Channel 13. The new update seems to disable the use of Channel 13 for some reason.
There is also another issue with the changing MAC's - I believe that some "public" WiFi networks such as the cloud use the MAC to remember your device and allow it to connect...
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
im not sure though but im guessing so does other apps with secured log in parameters. i do have the bank of america app. right after i did the update, and after inluding the new mac to my networks allowed list of mac addresses, the boa app again posted a message saying that the device where im accessing boa has not been used previously to access the account. so im guessing that it saves all the mac addresses of devices that accessed a boa account.

Help... Wifi Mac Address Changes On Every Reboot

Hey fellow GN users!
I seem to be having a problem with my wifi mac address changing every time I reboot... I was wondering if this is a hardware or a software problem? I have mac address filtering set on my router so it would be convenient if the mac address didn't change... I'm still on my first week with the phone and I want to make sure everything works before my 14 day period is over. Is anyone else having this problem? Anyone know a fix if they are having the problem? Any help would be most appreciated! Thanks!
Galaxy Nexus (LTE)
Unlocked, Rooted
Flashed with Android Revolution HD 2.1.2
Welcome to the club!
http://code.google.com/p/android/issues/detail?id=23330
From my support call to Samsung, this is apparently a software issue, but I'm not sure I believe that 100%. For me, I switched my home wifi around to use WPA-2 with a ridiculously long password and no MAC filter to make me no longer care, but that's just me I'm secretly hoping to be the guy that can tell Google "hey - you fixed it!!", probably why I don't push harder to exchange my phone.
Please add a comment/star to my Google Code issue if you don't mind; the more people that chime in the better off we will be. I truly believe that a lot of GNs have this problem since it's not something that most people would notice.
If getting rid of your MAC filter is impossible, you should really consider exchanging your device, I imagine it will be quite a while (if ever) for this to get fixed. Call me a pessimist if you must.
Odd, isn't a MAC address suppose to be hard flashed to the radio?
Mine started changing the Mac address today after rooting. The last month with it running stock, no issue. Hmmm, used the Galaxy Nexus tool kit for rooting.
MAC address filtering is not really a good security measure. It is very easy for someone to see the MAC addresses connected to a particular WAP and clone one of them.
You are much more secure using WPA2 with a decently long password.
I just started experiencing the problem yesterday. My phone DID have a 2c:44 address and I switched roms pretty frequently. I flashed an update to the Codename rom that I had been using for a while, and I wasn't able to connect to my router. Knowing what I thought I knew about MAC addresses I didnt think about it, i rebooted all sortsa crap, then thought what the hell check the mac filter list, and sure enough mine had changed, and now i'm sporting one of the dreaded 00:90:4c addresses and the last few characters change every reboot... I am not a happy camper.
I understand how it isn't an amazing security option, but in a small apartment building in the sticks in PA I know my neighbors have no idea how to get around it. WPA2 uses up too much bandwidth overhead for streaming 1080p over wifi. That's why I dont use it and use MAC filtering.
acroanidd said:
I understand how it isn't an amazing security option, but in a small apartment building in the sticks in PA I know my neighbors have no idea how to get around it. WPA2 uses up too much bandwidth overhead for streaming 1080p over wifi. That's why I dont use it and use MAC filtering.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
It is not a bandwidth overhead but a resource hog. But I get your jist. I save all my HD streaming for wired.
Have you done an EFS partition backup?
Sent from my Galaxy Nexus using XDA App
I didnt know what and EFS partition was until I just googled it and I've been rooting / rom'ing phones and devices (5 different phones and 2 tablets) for the last 2 years and never once heard of it.. that being said i did a nandroid backup and restoring it did not help
I'm going to try Odin flashing back, I read somewhere it fixes IMEI / EFS corruption, heres hoping it works for wlan mac addresses. Only place I found an Odin image of it was from megaupload so it will take a long time to get it...
Edit: if you clicked on the link for the firmware i posted, do NOT click it, i think that was GSM
Well that was a bust, odining back didn't help... I dont want to risk swapping the phone out considering i put one of those zagg screen protectors on it for a phone that is going to have the same problem... I am concerned because of the fact that i did have a valid sticking mac address, and all of a sudden it just stopped which leads me to believe it is totally software related.
frogskins said:
MAC address filtering is not really a good security measure. It is very easy for someone to see the MAC addresses connected to a particular WAP and clone one of them.
You are much more secure using WPA2 with a decently long password.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Was just about to say it. +1000. There is nothing about MAC address filtering that is secure. Anyone can spoof the MAC address, and its easy to intercept them when in range.
Use a normal security protocol and you'll be better off all around. MAC filtering is just a hassle anyways.
martonikaj said:
Was just about to say it. +1000. There is nothing about MAC address filtering that is secure. Anyone can spoof the MAC address, and its easy to intercept them when in range.
Use a normal security protocol and you'll be better off all around. MAC filtering is just a hassle anyways.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Thank you for your concerns however as I said before I dont need crazy security, I just had to deal with rednecks connecting to my router using torrents a couple times. Since that has happened and i enabled mac filtering I haven't had any problems (i would know because my internet bandwidth would go to crap)
Actually setting up WPA2 is more of a hassle than logging into a router, clicking on one link and typing in the mac address rather than somehow finding a way to configure my network to handle the bandwidth with WPA2, which I have tried, but even with a dual band n wireless ethernet bridge with gigabit out to a gigabit switch doesnt do the trick, disable wpa2 all of a sudden all my video stuttering woes go away.
That is at a personal level, at work I have MAC filtering not to connect as a security measure but my ip address is assigned based on it, and well it's much more complicated than at home... please if you are going to post something in this thread try to be helpful.
acroanidd said:
Actually setting up WPA2 is more of a hassle than logging into a router, clicking on one link and typing in the mac address rather than somehow finding a way to configure my network to handle the bandwidth with WPA2, which I have tried, but even with a dual band n wireless ethernet bridge with gigabit out to a gigabit switch doesnt do the trick, disable wpa2 all of a sudden all my video stuttering woes go away.
That is at a personal level, at work I have MAC filtering not to connect as a security measure but my ip address is assigned based on it, and well it's much more complicated than at home... please if you are going to post something in this thread try to be helpful.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Again, it has nothing to do with bandwidth. It has everything to do with the devices ability to encrypt and decrypt packets at full speeds, which obviously your device cannot do. You might want to step up to something a little more powerful.
I can do 1080p streaming on a G network with WPA2 enabled. The difference between my setup and yours? I am using an enterprise grade WAP (Cisco 1242). It has no problems whatsoever doing the encryption and decryption at the full wireless speed.
And I think you mentioned you were located in Central PA, and all you had to protect from was hicks. Well, I am one of those hicks (Live in Central PA as well) and I LOVE cracking in to WAPs
I am having this issue now. any solutions?
acroanidd said:
Thank you for your concerns however as I said before I dont need crazy security, I just had to deal with rednecks connecting to my router using torrents a couple times. Since that has happened and i enabled mac filtering I haven't had any problems (i would know because my internet bandwidth would go to crap)
Actually setting up WPA2 is more of a hassle than logging into a router, clicking on one link and typing in the mac address rather than somehow finding a way to configure my network to handle the bandwidth with WPA2, which I have tried, but even with a dual band n wireless ethernet bridge with gigabit out to a gigabit switch doesnt do the trick, disable wpa2 all of a sudden all my video stuttering woes go away.
That is at a personal level, at work I have MAC filtering not to connect as a security measure but my ip address is assigned based on it, and well it's much more complicated than at home... please if you are going to post something in this thread try to be helpful.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
WPA2 isn't crazy security. I wouldn't recommend anybody running anything less than WPA2 with 256 bit AES encryption. If you can't run that I recommend upgrading your hardware.
so... i just started having this issue after my battery died last night now today I have a different MAC..
This has to be fixed at kernel level or maybe a script to set the mac at bootup time can be used. really annoying and stupid

wi-fi {wifi} (multiple / static ip) manager app?

Anyone have a favourite wi-fi static ip manager?
(I'm on stock gb.)
-----
At home, I have to set a static ip or I can't connect. So far this is (sort of) ok - I turn off static ip when I leave, turn it back on when I return. The settings are remembered. However, if I have to start setting different static ip at different locations, this is going to quickly become a PITA.
In another building, 4 different SSID's available, the phone just goes into a disconnect / connect cycle on 3 of them (1 a TP-Link router, other 2 on a Cisco Valet M10) - never getting an IP. I'm guessing I'm running into the same static ip problem there, and need to set different static ip's depending upon which SSID I want to connect to.
Anyone have a favourite app for per SSID static ip setting / remembering?
TIA
bs27975 said:
Anyone have a favourite wi-fi static ip manager?
(I'm on stock gb.)
-----
At home, I have to set a static ip or I can't connect. So far this is (sort of) ok - I turn off static ip when I leave, turn it back on when I return. The settings are remembered. However, if I have to start setting different static ip at different locations, this is going to quickly become a PITA.
In another building, 4 different SSID's available, the phone just goes into a disconnect / connect cycle on 3 of them (1 a TP-Link router, other 2 on a Cisco Valet M10) - never getting an IP. I'm guessing I'm running into the same static ip problem there, and need to set different static ip's depending upon which SSID I want to connect to.
Anyone have a favourite app for per SSID static ip setting / remembering?
TIA
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Why the need for static IP? DHCP should work great. I use DHCP on my phone and never have to worry. Is it a security issue?
dudejb said:
Why the need for static IP? DHCP should work great. I use DHCP on my phone and never have to worry. Is it a security issue?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
D'OH!. Sorry, left that part completely out ...
Hardware issues of some sort, between routers and phone.
e.g. At home, everything is happy, non-phone, wired and wireless. With phone, with DHCP, it never connects. As soon as I set static, off it goes.
I agree, other places, leave DHCP, and all is fine.
But not at home, and now, I suspect, at this other location.
Various threads in various places seem to acknowledge the problem, it's not limited to particular phones or routers as far as anybody can tell, and the problem hasn't been pinned down to any particular cause / solution. One thread ponders whether it's an 802.11n-only router issue, but that isn't my case. I wonder if it has to do with particular router chipsets, but haven't enough information to draw any correlation.
So, I'm thinking it's worth trying static IPs at the other location, and thought I'd ask if anyone had a favourite app.
(It being all too easy to drown in useless results at the store, much like any internet search.)
Unfortunately I would say the majority of people use DHCP. If I were you I would try to fix the DHCP compatibility issue with your router. Try updating your firmware on it or lowering it to an older version. If your router supports it try DD-WRT (http://www.dd-wrt.ca/site/index) You can always also change your router but that has a cost associated to it, so try the free stuff first. Perhaps you have already done all this and I am just talking to hear my own voice (text). In that case disregard my message and carry on....
Just trying to be helpful..
JB
I agree, the majority of the time, DHCP works.
Part of the point of asking
bs27975 said:
Anyone have a favourite app for per SSID static ip setting / remembering?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
is that it doesn't all of the time.
And such an app is a diagnostic step towards detecting if a static/DHCP issue is in play.
Already running OpenWRT on my own router, Netgear WNDR3700 {dual-band, gigabit} (that needs the static IP, and I'm good with that).
Of course, I have no control over the routers in other locations.
dudejb said:
Unfortunately I would say the majority of people use DHCP. If I were you I would try to fix the DHCP compatibility issue with your router. Try updating your firmware on it or lowering it to an older version. If your router supports it try DD-WRT (http://www.dd-wrt.ca/site/index) You can always also change your router but that has a cost associated to it, so try the free stuff first. Perhaps you have already done all this and I am just talking to hear my own voice (text). In that case disregard my message and carry on....
Just trying to be helpful..
JB
Click to expand...
Click to collapse

[Q] Note 8.0 weird WiFI problem...

Hello,
I recently purchased the Note 8.0 and I'm experiencing a weird problem with the internet connection. I can connect to my wireless network, I can access other devices on the LAN, but I cannot access the Internet or ping the gateway (I can however ping other hosts on the LAN). I know it's not the tablet as I've tried it at work and I also tried running my S4 as a hot-spot and internet works as it should. The S4 works without a problem on my wireless at home as do a few laptops.
At this point, I'd say, it is obvious that it's something with my cable modem/router, but if possible I'd like to figure out what the problem is.
I found a post somewhere that had a similar problem, where the device in question was receiving the wrong MAC for the gateway, but this is not the case here as my tablet does not even receive a MAC for the gateway.
Output from the tablet:
android:/ $ ip neigh
<some IPv6 address> dev wlan0 lladdr <Gateway MAC> router STALE
192.168.0.1(gateway) dev wlan0 FAILED
192.168.0.5 dev wlan0 lladdr <Server MAC> reachable
Output from the S4:
android:/ $ ip neigh
<same IPv6 as above> dev wlan0 lladdr <Gatewawy MAC> router STALE
192.168.0.1 dev wlan0 lladdr <Gatweay MAC> reachable
192.168.0.5 dev wlan0 lladdr <Server MAC> reachable
I've tried resetting the modem back to factory defaults, removing/changing encryption type. I did not wipe the tablet as I've had the issue from day 1.
The only way I'm able to get the tablet to sort of connect to the internet is to assign a static IP to it, however that only works for a few mins and is very intermittent.
Does anyone have any suggestions? Any way to figure out why the tablet won't get the MAC for the gateway?
My cable modem/router is an Arris DG860, but unfortunately, there's very little info on it and I couldn't find a firmware upgrade for it. What's also interesting is that the tablet does not show up in the DHCP client list of the modem, however it gets an IP, connects and communicates with other hosts.
Thank you for your help
What IP is the Note 8 ending up with? If somehow it is outside the range of what it should be I would wonder if it is just giving itself an IP when it fails to receive one from the DHCP server (ie, your router). I know that Windows computers will do that as a fallback.
Can you check your router to see if perhaps the DHCP pool is too small? If that were the problem then it might not be allocating another IP because there aren't any left (based on it's current config). In which case you can just make the number of allowable IPs to be larger.
There may be other possibilities too. The above are just what is coming to mind at the moment.
It is a valid IP as I have access to other devices on the network, but to answer your question it gets 192.168.0.13 with a mask of 255.255.255.0. I wanted to try forcing the private network to work on IPv6, but haven't been able to figure it out yet.
The tablet gets the right MAC for the server and communicates with it, which leads me to believe that the router (gateway) isn't responding to ARP requests from the Note. I have some access to the router's CLI but it's not very helpful and I have no idea how to troubleshoot it on the Note..
finaldude said:
It is a valid IP as I have access to other devices on the network, but to answer your question it gets 192.168.0.13 with a mask of 255.255.255.0. I wanted to try forcing the private network to work on IPv6, but haven't been able to figure it out yet.
The tablet gets the right MAC for the server and communicates with it, which leads me to believe that the router (gateway) isn't responding to ARP requests from the Note. I have some access to the router's CLI but it's not very helpful and I have no idea how to troubleshoot it on the Note..
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
That is bizarre. Can you ping the gateway from other devices on the network? Can other devices on the network ping or otherwise see or access the Note 8? It seems like the Note 8 doesn't exist to the gateway, and so I'm wondering if it also doesn't exist to anything else on the network. It is possible (though I'm just guessing here) that the Note 8 is giving itself an IP address that it determines as being appropriate based on the other devices it can see. Given that it doesn't show up in the DHCP table on the gateway I can't really see how it is getting an IP unless it is assigning it to itself. Another thought is to check the IP addresses of all the other devices currently on the network in case somehow you're having an IP address conflict (ie, two separate devices ending up with the same IP somehow, which can happen temporarily in the case of a device having an IP and then being hibernated, during which another device is given the same IP, and then later the first device is resumed from hibernation).
If you don't receive much further help here on the XDA forums I'd suggest starting a thread over on the SmallNetBuilder Forums as there's lots of knowledgeable folks there that can help with networking things like this.
As for me, I've got to sign off for the night. Best wishes to you as you troubleshoot!
Hi and thanks for the reply.
Yes the gateway is pingable from other devices, so is the Note. I also tried changing the 192.168.0.xxx to 10.10.0.xxx with no luck. The Note received the 10. from the DHCP server, but the gateway still would not respond.
I think it might have something to do with the routing on the modem, the hosts on the network can communicate at layer 2 (no routing need) while everything on the outside needs to be router. Still does not explain why the gateway doesn't respond to the Note though...
Have you done a traceroute to another local device to see the path its taking?
You will need to have root and I think busybox. You will also need to su before doing traceroute... maybe there is an app that can a trace if your not rooted!
Sent from my GT-N5110 using Tapatalk HD
---------- Post added at 08:42 PM ---------- Previous post was at 08:35 PM ----------
What is your network diagram with models
(I.e note 8 > router(wrt54g) > cable modem)...
Sent from my GT-N5110 using Tapatalk HD
I am not able to run traceroute from the tablet, I tried it from my desktop and it completed, but never hit the gateway - it went right to the host.
the network model is
note8--->all-in-one-wireless cable modem
finaldude said:
I am not able to run traceroute from the tablet, I tried it from my desktop and it completed, but never hit the gateway - it went right to the host.
the network model is
note8--->all-in-one-wireless cable modem
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Is the router still left with it's default settings? Also, Is there a page in the router/modem's web gui for DHCP and if so, what are those settings? It sounds to me like the DHCP is failing to pass along the external GW and/or DNS servers. To test a theory, are you able to ping 8.8.8.8?
I wonder if this was solved? I'm having the exact same problem minus all the technical knowledge. Tech support at time Warner seem like they are reading a script. Has anyone found a fix or workaround for this modem? My note works everywhere but home
I might have narrowed down the issue...
On technical support last night it was resolved that the Note was looking for IP version 6 ip and the time warner box only outputs IP version 4...
Is there a way to have the note look for IP version 4??? I know nothing about this but I guess over this next year we are supposed to be switching to IP version 6?
I unpacked my note 8 yesterday and I experience an issue when connected to wifi. When I tried to download something from play store it taked too times and usually downloads remained blocked at 70/90% and this didn't happen in 3G. So I tried a factory reset and now all thing works great you could try..
Tapatalk on Samsung Galaxy Note 8.0 3G
mouse100 said:
I unpacked my note 8 yesterday and I experience an issue when connected to wifi. When I tried to download something from play store it taked too times and usually downloads remained blocked at 70/90% and this didn't happen in 3G. So I tried a factory reset and now all thing works great you could try..
Tapatalk on Samsung Galaxy Note 8.0 3G
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Factory reset doesnt do it for me.
My wifi works everywhere but at home using Time Warner on the Arris DG860 modem. I think the OP and my problem are because of a combo of these factors.
I believe it has to do with the IP change that is taking place this year.
If you look up online it seems to be kind of a big change. You can type ... time warner ip version 6... into google and see a link that explains it. I cant link for some reason.
I wish someone could confirm this, but does the note 8 only accept IP version 6? Time Warner will only deliver version 4 to me right now through this modem, and the tablet is making a version 6 IP.
Atleast thats where ive made it so far.
I can confirm that I have the same problem at my In-Laws house. Arris router, and Charter network in Louisville. Likely the same as Time Warner folks.
But I think the Arris router is the more likely culprit. I didnt feel comfortable asking the FIL to let me kack around in his router :laugh:
I have the same problem on my main wifi at the house. It's a 2.4/5 ghz setup. My guest wifi is just normal 2.4 different router etc. I'm going to need to look into this at length as this just isn't going to do. Also as far as IP6 is concerned we won't see that roll out Internet wise for at least another 2 years fully. When it does go full steam all of the IP4 routers APs will have to be either replaced or firmware upgraded if the internal radios will even support IP6. Most likely 70% won't and that's the reason you don't see a lot of IP6 routers etc. We have them on the enterprise side but most are not in use. I will report back when I have anything useful.
Casperi
Sent from my GT-N5110 using xda premium
---------- Post added at 11:54 AM ---------- Previous post was at 10:57 AM ----------
OK figured it out and it includes a bit of funny.
I went through my network setup and forgot that I had
MAC filtering on so I added the Note along with a face palm thinking
That was it, couldn't have been that easy right... No it wasn't but good
News.
The note 8 doesn't like the 20/40 "channel width" or some routers call it "wideband" in the routers or in my case access points. Turn that to 20 only and boom there you go. Wifi
Works perfect. You will find it typically under advanced settings.
Casperi
Sent from my GT-N5110 using xda premium
sweeptheleg said:
I might have narrowed down the issue...
On technical support last night it was resolved that the Note was looking for IP version 6 ip and the time warner box only outputs IP version 4...
Is there a way to have the note look for IP version 4??? I know nothing about this but I guess over this next year we are supposed to be switching to IP version 6?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
The Note 8 supports both 4 and 6. The issues described sound a lot like config issues on the modem or router. as stated before, sounds like an issue with the DHCP server (the thing that provides ips to the devices.)
Sent from my GT-N5110 using Tapatalk 4 Beta
Hmmm I have an ipad, note 2, ps3, laptop, gfs iphone all connecting just fine... hours and hours of tech support, and the best answer is incompatability. For some reason the note is only creating ip6 my isp only does 4. I understand the note is capabale of both, but in this specific instance there is a bug in the note with this router.
nothing to do with settings. If every other device I own connects without hassle then someone needs to fix the note 8. Christ my note 2 connects....
there were no options untouched by highest level tech person fromisp... its the note 8
Arris DG860 and Note 8 *Workaround*
Ok, just got done trouble shooting a customers Note 8 on working behind one of our DG860 modem/routers, what I was seeing was the Note 8 was showing up with an IPv6 address even if I had the IPv6 DHCP turned off. What I found works is if you go into LAN > DHCP on the DG860 and create a "Fixed DHCP Client" using the Notes MAC address and some address in the IPv4 range like 192.168.0.X it will force it to pull that instead of the IPv6 address and work. Hope this helps anyone running into this weird combination.
At wits end
I been having nothing but issues connecting my wifi only note 8 to the internet at my house. Everywhere else it works fine but at home nothing but issues and all other devices are connecting with no problems. I have tried it with a netgear router, and now a arris gateway and still cannot connect. The cable tech came out by chance and was checking my connections and could not figure out why it would not connect either. I have time warner if that makes a difference which I am starting to wonder it does seeing how I can connect everywhere else and have tried two different ways to connect at home.
Update: So after being on the phone with time warner, samsung, and live chat with Arris this is just one hot mess. Samsung is stating that there seems to be firmware issues with arris gateways which I have noticed many people posting problems with their arris products, and their resolution was to roll back the software. Time Warner is stating that they cannot roll back the software on the modems and was trying to blame it on my tablet, though it was working before I setup the gateway and it works on other routers even on a piece of crap belkin that likes to kick off everything it worked on that with no issues. Arris told me that they have no control over the software only the cable companies do, so in typical fashion a lot of passing the buck and finger pointing. I am just irate at the moment for I do not have a working tablet at home. Part of me thinks it is the android 4.2.2 as well, for I had 4.2.2 on my droid razr hd and had numerous wifi issues with it.
Update 2: After doing some more research I have found there seems to be a issue with the wifi card and the chipset with arris gateways so there is a compatibility issue with the card. I had my netgear hooked up to it before and didn't have issues so I am going to just use my netgear and run the gateway in bridge mode it should fix the issue.

[Q] Ip address switches between tmobil and DoD

So no to long ago I decided I would check the my phone's ip address and came across some questionable stuff. Here's my question:
1) How is it that my phone's ip address can change from being registered to tmobil on a 100.x.x.x address to sporadically being registered on DoD 30.x.x.x address?
2) How can it still happen even after I installed android firewall?
Conditions are always the same. I don't download any shady anything's. I pay for my rhapsody account and that's as far as my file sharing goes. I never have my WiFi enabled.
Any ideas or let me know what info you'd need to better access the situation. Thanks.
Without knowing what the allocated ip address really was, there it's really no way of knowing who the current owner of the block is, many blocks are relocated and may no longer be with who they used to be with, especially ipv4 blocks.
Not sure what android firewall would have to due with what the remote ip you are being allocated to with your dhcp network connection.
You should have no real control over what your network connection is given when you connect, other than possible controlling ipv6 vs ipv4.
krelvinaz said:
Without knowing what the allocated ip address really was, there it's really no way of knowing who the current owner of the block is, many blocks are relocated and may no longer be with who they used to be with, especially ipv4 blocks.
Not sure what android firewall would have to due with what the remote ip you are being allocated to with your dhcp network connection.
You should have no real control over what your network connection is given when you connect, other than possible controlling ipv6 vs ipv4.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
So does this help? the firewall lets me know that even though I have set it up to refuse the block of addresses in which in resides, they're still connection to my phone.
Not sure I'm understanding you anyway. You telling me they temporarily relocate my up because they re no longer with.... yet after a few minutes , sometimes hours, I'm right back to the same ip?
What he was saying I believe is that the IPv4 allocations have been changing do to the available IP address blocks running thin. Companies were encouraged to give up IP blocks that they weren't actually using. In simple terms, a company might have originally owned a block of 100,000 IPs but never actually used more than 50,000. So they gave back a block of 50,000 so another company(s) could use them instead.
I don't believe the IP address' are static on a carrier. I'm not sure but each time you connect to the carrier network (no signal or airplane mode) you could be giving a fresh IP address. Also that is certainly the case if you are on a WiFi network. Unless you phone was set up as a static connection, you would likely receive a new lease on an IP address.
Found this which sounds similar to what you are seeing.
https://blog.wireshark.org/2010/04/t-mobile-clever-or-insane/
chipworkz said:
Found this which sounds similar to what you are seeing.
https://blog.wireshark.org/2010/04/t-mobile-clever-or-insane/
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Exactly. Internal allocate IP's are normally Natt'd and not actuall the IP you show up on the Internet as.
When you connect to your provider for Network (not using WiFi), the provider (most likely T-Mobile) will allocate an IP to you via DHCP. That IP is what your phone uses to talk to the provider. It most likely is NOT what you look like when you hit the Internet though, that will most likely be a different IP because TMobile is most likely not providing you with an Internet routable IP.
So, right now, I turned off WiFi and I got the IP 100.143.28.84. When my phone touches the Internet though, it shows up as 206.29.182.169.
So at that point in time, my phone is using 100.143.28.84 to get to T-Mobile's network and the Internet sees my phone as 206.29.182.169. the outside IP is in TMobiles published block. And why the internal IP is also, it really doesn't matter what it is because that is not what your phone looks like when it gets to the Internet.
It is possible in your area there are different networks available internally that are given to you when you connect depending on where you physically are and what towers you are closest to. At some times you get the 100.x network and you might even get the same IP as before because of a lease of that IP to your device, but then you move to a slightly different area which is handing out 30.x addresses. All perfectly normal. and the internal IP's really don't matter much.
You can use a search of Whats My IP to see what the Internet thinks your IP is when you get there.
With some providers (Verizon for example) if you are using ipv6, you will always get a non-routable IP, meaning that if you figure out your Internet IP, an outside connection may not get back to you unless your device initiated the connection, but if you use ipv4, they gave you a temp IP that would end up with a routable IP back. You could then use that to connect to your phone using something like VNC or other service. Now days, that is much more likely not the case unless you are paying for that special IP service. I don't know if Tmobile offers that type of service, but Verizon did at least a year or two ago.
In anycase, you firewall shouldn't matter unless you don't want to access your providers network.
In lamens terms I think he's talking about an internel subnet mask
chipworkz said:
Found this which sounds similar to what you are seeing.
https://blog.wireshark.org/2010/04/t-mobile-clever-or-insane/
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
That was a very interesting article. If the author's theory is correct, T-mobile was playing some cute and dangerous IP games in 2010.

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