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I really should clarify things a bit. Firstly the new switch was installed last class, last day of last term. 2 other guys in the class swapped the cabling over from the old switch, testing continuity with cable tester as they went. Problem is they aren't that good. Each time they tested continuity they got different answers. There testing showed one problem, with no signal on wallplate 18 of 24. I suspect they have made mistakes, so I am going to retest the whole network tomorrow. By the way the switch is a 24 port model, there are 20 workstations and one server with gigabit cards, one teachers workstation (only has 10/100 card) and one networked printer (10/100). Only the 20 student workstations get rebuilt regularly. Network is all CAT5e.
Second problem, teacher logged in as admin on one of the workstations and installed the Netgear switch management software. Changed the IP address of switch from its default address to a static one in the same network range as the rest of the network, etc and clicked save. Then he tried accessing the switch via his browser using its IP address but nothing loaded. However was able o PING the IP. Before I could check out what he had done wrong, class ended and even though we said we'd stay back, he said he had to leave and that he'd check out the problem during the holidays.
Anyway, we came back this week and the teacher tells us about the imaging having gone from 12 to 24 minutes. We have this class again tomorrow. I doubt he's even looked at the manuals or attempted to set up the switch properly since our last class. Also prior to the upgrade the class was re-imaging 10 workstations at a time, however since the upgrade he said rebuilding 10 machines had failed but he had tried from 1 to 4 machines at a time successfully, but hadn't attempted any more yet.
Tomorrow, I'll retest cabling and have a look at the switch manual and try and find out what the teacher has probably configuted wrong. Hopefully that should go smoothly and it will be a simple fix. If not then I thought having a few useful network monitoring/management utilities on hand would be useful. SNMP is a good idea. Any otherr suggestions welcome.
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