kc0eks
New Member
- Reaction score
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- Location
- Pueblo, CO
Hello all,
I took over IT work for a business here not long ago and was thrown into a horribly designed network and pretty much everything else. One of the things I still do not quite grasp is the following:
it has a total of 4 NICs all connected to the same switch, subnet, with different IPs. The network only has about 10 clients, none of which are really heavy use, moderate use at best. Most of the traffic is SQL, and filesharing/printing.
What I have been unsure about is why is it setup this way? I do not see much use for it. It does not have load balancing of any sort, just 4 NICs. Windows also likes to complain about duplicate names on the network because of this.
So, please help me understand. Why? and should I just get rid of the extra connections?
Thanks!
I took over IT work for a business here not long ago and was thrown into a horribly designed network and pretty much everything else. One of the things I still do not quite grasp is the following:
it has a total of 4 NICs all connected to the same switch, subnet, with different IPs. The network only has about 10 clients, none of which are really heavy use, moderate use at best. Most of the traffic is SQL, and filesharing/printing.
What I have been unsure about is why is it setup this way? I do not see much use for it. It does not have load balancing of any sort, just 4 NICs. Windows also likes to complain about duplicate names on the network because of this.
So, please help me understand. Why? and should I just get rid of the extra connections?
Thanks!