sedrosken
Florida Man
This is frankly rather bizarre. I've installed 11 to a separate drive in my main to see if the Arc drivers are any better on it, so I'm using my X540 10GbE LAN card. It may be worth noting that I had to forcibly install drivers meant for Windows 10 for it as the setup program Intel provides won't detect the card on 11 -- presumably it's not supported.
I have a scheduled task that mounts my NFS share to Z: on startup and it's failing because network isn't available at startup, it's not available until a few seconds after I log in. I can leave it at the login screen as long as I want, it doesn't ever connect until I'm logged in. I expect this kind of problem from WLAN under Windows XP, but not from Ethernet on 11. I thought it might be that I configured the static IP in the Windows Settings app rather than in the device properties under IPv4, so I unset it in Settings and reset it there, but it doesn't seem to have helped. For context, I need the static IP on my workstation because unless I want to open up the entire share to the entire subnet, I have to get more specific. If I have to, I suppose I could exploit DHCP reservations and just move the IP in /etc/exports to whatever I reserve for it -- 10.254.0.21 is outside my DHCP range, after all. That's .100-.254.
Anyone have an inkling as to what might be going on here? Google's getting more and more useless -- it gave me a ton of results for Ethernet not working at all, but that's not my issue. Once I'm logged in, it's fine.
I have a scheduled task that mounts my NFS share to Z: on startup and it's failing because network isn't available at startup, it's not available until a few seconds after I log in. I can leave it at the login screen as long as I want, it doesn't ever connect until I'm logged in. I expect this kind of problem from WLAN under Windows XP, but not from Ethernet on 11. I thought it might be that I configured the static IP in the Windows Settings app rather than in the device properties under IPv4, so I unset it in Settings and reset it there, but it doesn't seem to have helped. For context, I need the static IP on my workstation because unless I want to open up the entire share to the entire subnet, I have to get more specific. If I have to, I suppose I could exploit DHCP reservations and just move the IP in /etc/exports to whatever I reserve for it -- 10.254.0.21 is outside my DHCP range, after all. That's .100-.254.
Anyone have an inkling as to what might be going on here? Google's getting more and more useless -- it gave me a ton of results for Ethernet not working at all, but that's not my issue. Once I'm logged in, it's fine.