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The tale of a single MAC
- Subject: The tale of a single MAC
- From: graham at g-rock.net (Graham Wooden)
- Date: Sun, 02 Jan 2011 07:22:33 -0600
- In-reply-to: <[email protected]>
Hey Seth, thanks for the reply.
I don't use the iLO port, so I didn't look at it's MAC within the BIOS,
however my issue isn't that the MACs are the same within a physical machine.
They're different, just like all the other HP gear ... It's that I have two
machines that the MACs are identical. Like Server-A's NIC1 matches
Server-B's NIC1 ... And the same goes for NIC2. Heck, maybe even their iLO
matches too. I just re-read my post and I can see where maybe I didn't
explain it properly. Yesterday was a long day ...
I guess it's not that big of deal now, I resolved it rather quickly by
putting Server-B on another VLAN.
On 1/2/11 12:56 AM, "Seth Mattinen" <sethm at rollernet.us> wrote:
> On 1/1/11 7:33 PM, Graham Wooden wrote:
>>
>> So ? here is the interesting part... Both servers are HP Proliant DL380 G4s,
>> and both of their NIC1 and NIC2 MACs addresses are exactly the same. Not
>> spoofd and the OS drivers are not mucking with them ... They?re burned-in ?
>> I triple checked them in their respective BIOS screen. I acquired these two
>> machines at different times and both were from the grey market. The ?What
>> the ...? is sitting fresh in my mind ... How can this be?
>>
>> In the last 15 years of being in IT, I have never encountered a ?burned-in?
>> duplicated MACs across two physically different machines. What are the
>> odds, that HP would dup?d them and that both would eventually end up at my
>> shop? Or maybe this type of thing isn?t big of deal... ?
>>
>
>
> None of the HP servers I have contain duplicate MAC addresses. (I just
> looked through all the iLO2 cards to make sure I wasn't lying.) I'll
> send you some details offlist.
>
> ~Seth
>