|
Problem description: My Google fiber was acting a bit finnicky the other night and I power cycled the modem, great success internet isn't finnicky, but now I can't get anything out of my switch. For my WFH setup I have a switch with an ethernet cable going to my PC and one going to my work laptop. Neither my work laptop or my PC is detecting the hardwire connection (but wifi works fine) Attempted fixes: I power cycled the switch and power cycled the modem again. I have tried ipconfig /release (and /renew) and that didn't do anything. Recent changes: The only change that would've effected this is power cycling the modem Operating system: Windows 10 for both machines. System specs: My modem / router is the basic Google "puck" looking one and the switch is a 4 port netgear unmanaged switch (GS305) Location: United States I have Googled and read the FAQ: Yes. Googling my question has yielded some information, but everything I've tried has not worked. I also don't know if I'm googling the right thing because largely the questions that I'm seeing that are similar are working under the assumption that the netgear device is the modem/router and not a switch. I'm sure the solution is simple and someone will go "Do X dumbshit" but I'm at a loss as to what to do. I've had this switch for a year and half and have not had any issues with it before.
|
# ? Feb 2, 2022 15:50 |
|
|
# ? May 3, 2024 14:22 |
|
Do the lights from the Router port to the Switch port light up? Switch port to Computer ports are lighting up on all ends as well? Have you tried swapping cables?
|
# ? Feb 3, 2022 00:06 |
|
Sixfools posted:Do the lights from the Router port to the Switch port light up? Switch port to Computer ports are lighting up on all ends as well? Have you tried swapping cables? All lights are lit up, I haven't tried switching cables yet because I don't think cables are the issue, but I'm willing to try it if nothing else.
|
# ? Feb 3, 2022 02:50 |
|
When a basic switch stops working it's usually a cut-and-dry situation AKA it's dead and something on the board may need to be soldered to repair it. It's rare but possible that one of the cables (or one of the ports on the switch or the computer port) has malfunctioned though. That could cause a network storm which would stop traffic sometimes. Trying different cables/devices etc. would determine this. It's also possible the switch power cord is failing but that's also a rare issue.
|
# ? Feb 4, 2022 00:20 |
|
Even though I have no clue why, swapping the loving cables worked. I noticed that the clip on the cable that was plugged into the modem was gone so I think maybe it wasn't fully seated in the modem. loving strange.
|
# ? Feb 5, 2022 02:33 |