No Network Connectivity on TCP/IP-Based NetworkID: Q185753
|
You may not be able to view or connect to any shared resources on a network that uses the Transport Control Protocol/Internet Protocol (TCP/IP), even though your network adapter and network server settings have been verified to work correctly.
This problem can occur if you change the Internet Protocol (IP) address
for your computer to any of the following invalid IP addresses in the
TCP/IP Properties dialog box:
The specified IP address is not valid. Please check that the value you typed is correct. If you believe the value is correct but you still receive this message, check with your network administrator.
To work around this problem, change the IP address to a valid IP address.
To do so, follow these steps:
Microsoft has confirmed this to be a problem in Microsoft Windows 95 and Windows 98.
Networks that use TCP/IP set a unique IP address for each computer to
determine its identity. The 127.0.0.1 IP address is reserved for testing
the TCP/IP stack with the PING command. The following table lists IP
addresses that are not valid for a computer, where <x.y.z> is a range of
numbers from 0 to 254.
Invalid IP address Valid (reserved) usage
-----------------------------------------------------
127.0.0.1 Loopback/LocalHost address
255.0.0.0 Class A subnet mask
255.255.0.0 Class B subnet mask
255.255.255.0 Class C subnet mask
225.<x.y.z> - Class D address (multicast only)
239.<x.y.z>
240.<x.y.z> - Class E address (reserved)
254.<x.y.z>
255.255.255.255 Broadcast address
IP address Subnet mask Resolved IP address Result
-------------------------------------------------------------
00000001 (1) 11111100 (252) 11111101 (253) valid
00000011 (3) 11111100 (252) 11111111 (255) invalid
ARTICLE-ID: Q172218
TITLE : Microsoft TCP/IP Host Name Resolution Order
Additional query words: connect nic
Keywords : kbenv kbnetwork win95 win98
Version : WINDOWS:95
Platform : WINDOWS
Issue type : kbprb
Last Reviewed: February 3, 1999