Windows 7 tcp ip registry entries




















Remove From My Forums. Answered by:. Archived Forums. Windows 7 Networking. Sign in to vote. Hello, I read a previous thread on this, but there seemed to be no resolution.

It's almost as if Nagle is being forced on in Windows 7, regardless of the settings. Monday, September 27, AM. Hi, Thanks for the post! Please remember to click "Mark as Answer" on the post that helps you, and to click "Unmark as Answer" if a marked post does not actually answer your question.

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Microsoft provides third-party contact information to help you find technical support. This contact information may change without notice. Microsoft does not guarantee the accuracy of this third-party contact information. Skip to main content. This browser is no longer supported. Download Microsoft Edge More info. Is the computer connected to any domain network? Do you experience the same issue with a wired net connection?

Note : You should not turn off Windows Firewall unless you have another firewall enabled. Turning off Windows Firewall might make your computer and your network, if you have one more vulnerable to damage from worms or hackers.

Run a full computer scan with the Microsoft Safety Scanner to make sure that the computer is virus free. Safety Scanner Disclaimer : There could be a loss of data while performing a scan using Microsoft safety scanner to eliminate virus if any. I would suggest you to perform SFC scan and check if that helps. Was this reply helpful?

Yes No. Sorry this didn't help. Thanks for your feedback. This one has me stumped. EDIT: If after reading all of this, you are married to the idea of directly editing the registry, we can work on creating a set of batch scripts that use reg. Have you considered putting a batch file in the startup folder instead of using the registry? You can use the netsh command to do that.

With Netsh. For example:. The following command configures the interface named Local Area Connection with the static IP address The trick to this would be to make a separate batch file for each computer and to know what the NIC name is. Supposedly the registry creates a blank value in the location of the Default Gateway and it causes the I. So what he wants to do is be able to fix all these computers that he has on his network through the registry because he can't walk these clients through the procedures, they don't have the capacity to do so.

I understand now exactly what is going on and I think all he needs is a key to send to his clients with the Blank value removed and the proper gateway set. In addition to having physical adapters in a pc, you can also have software driven ones. Is there a technet article or something on this I can read? I still would think that netsh would overwrite the blank value, but I would have to reproduce the issue to test.

I hadn't thought of the Netsh idea and making a script. However, if it's just doing through command-line what manually setting the IPv4 settings on the NIC does, then it would have to be run as a startup script, since manually setting the default gateway, followed by a restart, produces the same results. This would be due to the space still existing in the registry key. While a script would essentially fix the problem on every boot, I'd prefer to fix the registry problem itself, on a case-by-case basis, as to keep as little administrative overhead as possible on the issue.

The techs already have multiple clones with different drivers and configuration files to keep track of. I'd prefer not to add another thing into the mix that they have to worry about. Test this. It will search for a card with a given name you said the hardware was the same , find the computer's unique GUID, then add the DefaultGateway value forcing an overwrite.

All the user has to do is double click the batch file. Will try this!



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