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Sometimes I have to work with physical hardware. There are over 300 machines in our lab, split among two subnets. But for some reason, I can never access my machines by hostnames.

Every other week, there's an IP conflict on this network, requiring me to log into the active directory server and delete old DNS entries. This usually happens because someone decided to deploy 64 VMs on a huge server, all at once, didn't boot them with a delay, let alone with with a warning to IT.

Then when my superior asks how my progress has been and I respond with "I can't even get the machines to ping each other by hostname, there's something wrong with the DNS:, I get the following response: "HOW COME NOBODY ELSE IS HAVING PROBLEMS WITH THIS. YOU'RE FULL OF SHIT", from someone who spends 90% of the year abroad, working remotely.

Comments
  • 2
    Respect. I only every dip into networking - you've got a tough job.
  • 2
    @kunashe thanks! The worst part is, even though I'm technically a developer, I spend at least 70% of every project wrangling machine issues. 😵
  • 1
    would ipv6 help?
  • 1
    @Many Unfortunately, I'm not in charge of the network topology. I'm just affected by how bad it is. I don't even have VMs running on these systems, the VMs I mentioned were someone else's.
  • 1
    I think this could be some badly configured DHCP combined with overlapping static IP addresses... or the subnet is too small to hold all clients.
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