DHCP reserving on the router, also on the Wifi clone device?


Recommended Posts

In March I got a new router from my ISP and after a lot of faff I managed to get my wifi clone working again which is basically a TP-Link homeplug network.

 

The main TP-Link AP is wired to my router and the "extender" is plugged in upstairs and all it is supposed to do is clone my network with the Wifi clone option it has. Because of this I never even considered setting up DHCP reserve on the Wifi clone, however: recently a lot of my devices are getting 169.x.x.x addresses indicating there is a conflict somewhere, this just started happening a week ago, I haven't changed anything in that time.

 

My devices only started connecting to Wifi properly when I unplugged the extender upstairs.

 

So without having done any initial research into this problem I am wondering if I should also be cloning the DHCP reserve details on the extender? There's a full AP configuration page I can access on the extender to enable/disable 2.4GHz and 5Ghz and also setup the DHCP reserve. 

 

I have a lot of devices that use Wifi, so it is no small feat to setup reserve (17 wired and wifi reserved addresses in total).

  • Like 1

The 169.x.x.x addresses would suggest these devices connected to your homeplug / access point are not finding a DHCP server on your network. Are the home plugs still connected to each other? 


Only one device should be doing DHCP on your network, so your DHCP reserve should only be setup on your router.


Anything else on your network such as a homeplug or wireless access point should just passive and only extending your network, not running DHCP.

 

I presume this WiFi clone option is to clone the SSID, shared key and encryption settings on your main router? If so can you just set this up manually on the access point / home plugs so everything is broadcasting the same SSID / shared key and encryption settings?

 

It might be easier for people to advise more if you could post a network diagram, showing the local static ip address of your router, home plugs / access points, along with screenshots of their configuration.

I managed to fix it, it seems somehow the Powerline network suddenly stopped working, so what I think happened is that the extender was broadcasting an identical SSID for 2.4 and 5GHz Wifi networks that was causing a conflict (maybe?) I can't really be sure, because the extender is upstairs and most of my equipment is downstairs. The printer "successfully" connected to my 2.4GHz wifi but still only got a 169 IP address when it should be in the 192.168.178.x range. 

 

I just ended up completely resetting the Powerline network and starting from scratch, and now it works:

 

SNAG-0005.png

 

You are right about DHCP reserve only being configured from the router, there isn't even an option to setup DHCP on the extender, so something else was clearly going on.

 

I wouldn't bother with it if it weren't for my Nest Protect upstairs which kept going offline without the extender network. 

  • Like 2
  • Thanks 1

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
  • Posts

    • Autonomous post-training loop placed 8th of 4,000 and then rewrote its own evaluation strategy. An autonomous AI system built by researchers at Amazon's A-EVO-Lab completed a full post-training run on a 30 billion parameter NVIDIA Nemotron model — with no human in the loop, across four rounds running over multiple weeks — and then did something its designers had not planned for: it detected that its own internal evaluation metric had become misleading and redesigned the search strategy it was using to improve itself. https://www.techtimes.com/articles/319123/20260626/nvidia-ai-trained-itself-30b-model-corrected-its-own-broken-metric-mid-run.htm
    • Grok Adult Content Tops 10 Billion Images Monthly More than half of all traffic flowing through Grok, Elon Musk's flagship AI product, now comes from users requesting pornographic images, explicit videos, and **** roleplay https://www.techtimes.com/articles/319142/20260626/grok-adult-content-tops-10-billion-images-monthly-xai-engineers-admit-csam-has-no-fix.htm
    • If Ford would stop hiring SUITS to run the company, and put CAR GUYS back in charge perhaps they could do better. Heck, the only CAR they produce today is the Mustang. Hey Ford! Not everyone needs/wants an overpriced SUV or pickup truck that is so tall you have to have a step ladder to get in and out of it.
    • Amazing how some will just jump all over something. Probably the same people that thought Musk was a "tech god" before he saddled up with "bad orange man". Before, they worshiped at his feet, including a lot of so called hollywood types. Now, because he fell off the plantation truck, they toss him under the bus.
  • Recent Achievements

    • One Year In
      bernmeister earned a badge
      One Year In
    • Week One Done
      Scoobystu earned a badge
      Week One Done
    • Week One Done
      tuben earned a badge
      Week One Done
    • First Post
      OffsetAbs earned a badge
      First Post
    • Reacting Well
      OffsetAbs earned a badge
      Reacting Well
  • Popular Contributors

    1. 1
      +primortal
      492
    2. 2
      +Edouard
      226
    3. 3
      PsYcHoKiLLa
      162
    4. 4
      Steven P.
      75
    5. 5
      FloatingFatMan
      71
  • Tell a friend

    Love Neowin? Tell a friend!