Not sure the exact issue but we have an AppleTv that doesnt like one particular VLAN.
It will be offered a lease and not take it.
The IP of the appletv is static in this vlan and static in another vlan.
In the other vlan one can plug in the appletv and it gets a lease right away.
I have had other times that leases do strange things so its more annoying than shocking.
Thoughts??
(all vlans get there dns from the router via the lanip of the vlan)
(all vlans have internet access from the same vlan forward rule)
(leases are 2D, same for both)
(personally checked the connectivity of the cables)
(A ps4 connected on the same vlan works fine)
(ip pool is from xx.xx.xx.5 - xx.xx.xx.10)
Is the pool in another VLAN, where the AppleTV does work smooth also a few IP’s in size or exact the same approach ?
You have like 1 bridge on which you have several vlan’s ? Or are you running multiple dhcp-services ?
I think 2 small packet capture would be interesting to compare : 1 x AppleTV on the problematic VLAN and 1 x AppleTV on working VLAN and see if any difference is visible.
My guess was somehow mac addresses are getting bunged up along the way.
Perhaps in the 260GS switch, perhaps in the DLINK 1100 24 port switch or perhaps apple was seeing multiple requests from the same unit on the same public IP and refused to connect…
Not sure will track to see if it happens again, and will attempt to capture some more specific logging.