Self-assigned IP address issue after upgrade

I do a lot of file transferring from my mac to another pc laptop, so I've got them hooked together with an ethernet cable.  I had this issue in the past, where I'd try to connect but my network settings kept saying the "ethernet has a self-assigned IP address and will not be able to connect".  The solution I found to fixing this was to open up the Advanced Settings, and change the IPv6 configuration to "Link-local only" and then everything would work perfectly.
I upgraded to Yosemite yesterday, however, and now that solution no longer works.  Still getting self-assigned IP.  How can I fix this??

I took the following from the Aztech website:
8) Can Aztech HomePlugs work with Apple MACs?
Yes they can, Aztech HomePlugs work with Apple MACs. However, there is a requirement for using the Utility software. The Utility software will only run on Microsoft Windows 98SE / ME/ 2000/ XP/ Vista.
Which contradicts itself, if the Utility is required but only runs on Windows, how does that work on a Mac?

Similar Messages

  • Airport " Self Assigned Ip Address" Issue SOLVED

    Hi Guys,
    I finally solved my problem and i just wanted to share for those who are in the same predictament. Well, for starters i have an iMac OS X Desktop. I recently just started having problems with my airport connection.  I would get the following message. " Airport has a self-assigned IP address and may not be able to connect to the internet"
    Now, this post is specifically for those who have tried other solutions and had no luck such as my self. Also, for those who are trying to share connection from the ethernet to airport. I have tried the "New Location" Method, The turn airport off and on method etc
    So, i had to investigate myself and i have found a quite simple solution.
    1. Go To > System Preferences > Network ( You should be on the exact image above )
    2.Highlight Ethernet > Copy or write down The IP Address > Press the left arrow at the top left of the page, In other words go back.
    3.Now Highlight Airport such as the image above > Click On " Advanced" at the bottom right of the screen.
    4. You should be at the screen SIMILIAR to the one above ( depending on your computer) > Where it states " Configure IPv4" Select " Using DHCP with manual address " from the the drop down menu.
    5.  Where it states " IP Address" Enter your "Ethernet" IP address that you copied in step 2.
    6. Click on " Apply Now" at the bottom right of the screen > A second message should now pop up confirming whether to " Apply Now " " Don't Apply" or whatever it says on your computer, just continue on clicking "Apply Now" or " Continue" , " Okay" or whatever the exact word is on your computer.
    7. Go back to the original network screen, such as the one shown in the first image. ( System Prefrences >Network) , & Airport should now say connected.
    So, that's what worked for me. Hopefully it will work for you too. If you need help with anything feel free to comment and i will reply soon as possible.  I know how annoying this problem was for me so i am willing to help.

    I'm glad it worked for you. Okay, if I understand you correctly, You are asking what password do you need when connecting to wifi on the other device ? If so, it depends on how you have your network setup. For starters, I would need to know your network specifics before I can answer. Is it an unsecured network ? Such as, your cable provider "optimumwifi" or "xfinitywifi"? Or did you create the network yourself ? If you are connecting using the Internet your cable provider provides from the modem, you do not need a password. If it asks you for an password, try using the password you used on your cable providers website. If you are using a created network. There are a few steps to retrieve the password. Also, it depends, What type of device are you trying to connect too ?

  • Airport Self-Assigned IP Address Issue

    Hello. I recently started having issues with my MacBook Pro's Airport connecting to my home wi-fi. The Airport icon shows I'm fully connected to the internet, however, when I click and open up Network Settings I'm being told that my Airport is self-assigning an IP address instead of getting one from the router. My roommate also has a MacBook Pro an their computer is having no issues with connecting to our wi-fi. My iPhone 4 is also not connecting to our wi-fi. I have read that you can manually assign the IP address which is how I'm connecting to my home's wi-fi now, but I feel that there has to be another way for this issue to be resolved so I don't have to spend 5 minutes trying to find an unused IP address every time I want to connect to the internet. If this has been covered in another thread, please let me know. Thanks in advance!

    Try the information mentioned - http://support.apple.com/kb/HT1401
    Or you can try posting or searching in the Snow Leopard forum area. There are network experts there with a wealth of information - http://discussions.apple.com/forum.jspa?forumID=1343

  • Ethernet has self assigned IP Address,will not connect to internet?

    Ethernet has a self assigned IP Address and will not connect to the internet.
    I am on -  Mac os X - 10.7.5
    Using a BT Broadband Router, my power mac is connected to the network via TP-Link Plug POWERLINE. This has worked great for ever!
    A week ago, my web connection dropped, network settings say "Ethernet 1 is active and has a self assigned IP Address and will not connect to the internet"
    This seems to be a popular thread and I have followed all the answers I can find and the problem remains.
    I also run a Powerbook on the wireless internet and other appliances such as, iPads, iPhones, and the wireless is fine.
    My sky box and Xbox 360 (both ethernet via TP-Link) also have NO connection.
    When I turn my laptops wireless off and try the ethernet cable (tried a new one too) instead, there is the same SELF-ASSIGNED IP ADDRESS issue.
    This point me to the router or TP-Link network.  I have replaced the router, same errors.
    On my Powermac I have -
    Deleted 'system configuration from the system folder - as advised by apple.
    Tried swapping from DCHP, DCHP Manual and renewing lease etc.
    Could anyone help at all? I am lost now as how to solve the problems.
    All my TP-Link power line extenders show the correct lights, i.e., all on and yellow.
    I am not experienced in networks, this is driving me mad now!
    Any help would be appreciated
    Thanks
    A

    Open System Preferences/Network
    Select the Location you use at home
    You may need to click the Padlock bottom left at this point if it's locked, enter the admin password to unlock
    In the left hand column drag the Ethernet connection to the top of the list and remove any you don't use
    Click the Advanced button bottom right
    Click the TCP/IP Tab
    Set Configure IPv4 to Using DHCP
    Click OK bottom right and you should see the Router IP number appear and a unique but similar one for your Mac
    Click Ok then click Apply and close the Panel

  • After reading hours on this forum still having self-assigned IP address

    I just posted this below on another thread but it kinda is in the wrong subforum. This really is a networking problem:
    I have spent about 3-4 hours today already (a Sunday after all) reading just about every thread I could find that mentions this problem (airport choosing a self-assigned IP address and thus not sharing the internet from ethernet connection with the iPhone) on this forum and elsewhere.
    Power circuit interruption didn't work
    rebooting, resetting, etc all not working
    password deletion not working
    moving it up or down not working
    It worked fine now for months. My set up is a dsl router that connects the internet via ethernet to my iMac and then Airport is supposed to share it via Wifi so my iPhone can use it. As I said, that worked just fine for months now.
    Yesterday I upgraded to snow leopard and am now on 10.6.4. It worked still fine yesterday!
    Then I shut the system down.
    This morning reboot and it just won't work anymore.
    Any suggestion mentioned anywhere in this forum which a non-specialist like me understands does not work on my setup. I don't know where to go next or who to even ask for help!
    It's so frustrating I obviously need this to work.
    Because my iPhone has Daylite touch and needs the server setting to work to connect properly and sync. Daylite only syncs via wifi. That's my work!
    Anymore ideas out there?
    Message was edited by: BettinaH

    Hi,
    thanks for offering help! Really appreciated.
    I'm not quite sure how that should help? I'm always a bit with resetting things. What can it potentially mess up that is working now? What settings will be affected? There is a list but I'm not sure if there are any current changes.
    And in the list it doesn't seem to be directly linked to any networking info.
    I've tried a save reboot now but while this is apparently a good idea in any event, it didn't help solve my problem. Still getting a self-assigned IP.
    I wonder if getting a new router might solve the problem? Mine is somewhat old. The weird thing is though that it did work for a short while before it stopped doing so. So this can't really be then, can it?
    Oh this is so frustrating. I must get my network running again.

  • Connectivity Issue: "Airport has a self-assigned ip address..."

    I've been using the same wireless network via AT&T with their own wireless modem/router that they provided for the past six months. Never had an issue EVER. Now....suddenly, it says "Airport has a self-assigned ip address and may not be able to connect to the internet."
    OK. I jumped on my girlfriends IBM, it and all the other PC computers in our house work FINE. I can also directly connect to the router via an ethernet cable and connect FINE.
    So I open up the router settings in my browser and notice that the IP address the router says my computer has is 192.168.1.100. This is not the IP address my network settings displays when I get a DHCP lease. So... I select "manually" instead of "automatically via DHCP" and type in the IP address the router seems to think my computer is. Now in the "show network status window" it says that "Airport is connected to the network" but I still can't connect to the internet.
    This is driving me completely bat **** crazy. Nothing has been changed in the wireless settings on my computer, any other computer in the house, or the router itself. This seems to have happened randomly, after searching all over the internet I can't find any solution that works for me. anyone know what's up?

    As you may have gathered, this message appears when the computer has failed to obtain an IP number from the router using DHCP, so it self-assigns a fallback number which, since the router doesn't know it, prevents connection to the internet.
    The obvious first step is to turn everything off, and then boot the router and each of the computers, one at a time, so that each should get a new DHCP lease. All the IP numbers should be issued and obtained automatically.
    This thread offers some solutions, some of which have worked for some posters:
    http://discussions.apple.com/thread.jspa?threadID=1417058&tstart=0

  • Self-assigned IP address after downloading Mavericks

    Last night I downloaded Mavericks on my MacBook Pro and everything was working fine. This afternoon however now System Preferences says I have a Self-Assigned IP. I haven't changed any preferences or done anything different so I'm really confused. I can't connect to Wi-Fi or to the Ethernet cable in my room. Any ideas on how to fix this issue?

    I am now having this same issue. I have the issue with my ethernet connection.  I am trying to share my internet connection between my MBP and my Xbox 360 and I have this pesky self-assigned ip address.   PLEASE HELP!!

  • Lost wireless and repeated self assigned IP address

    After I updated to OSX 10.5.6 my powerbook started dropping my wireless/internet connection, and adopted a self-assigned IP address. This happened whether I connected to the router via wireless or cable.
    I was eventually able to change the system configuration files as suggested in previous posts, and reset my PRMU. This has worked for a wee while, but sometimes on starting up my laptop, the machine self assigns again.
    I know the internet is available as I can access it from my iphone.
    Then 20min ago, whilst surfing, the internet went down AGAIN, and self-assigned its favourite IP address.
    I recently updated to 10.5.7, but the problem remains.
    Is this a new problem or has it been going on for a while?
    Also, is it a hardware or a software problem?
    Any ideas?
    Charlie

    If you are able to connect initially and then it drops out I would look towards possible sources of interference. While most modern devices avoid this issue fairly well, it is a possibility. Devices such as cordless phones used to cause problems.
    If it is dropping out while you are physically connected, I would perhaps check the settings on your router. Most models have a reset function which will allow you to reset it to factory defaults. Then you could reconfigure it and see if the problem persists.
    The other possibility is that there is a software service on your macbook that is starting up and causing the network loss. If possible, I would attempt to initialize and reinstall all the software on your macbook. Note that this will wipe everything off, so make sure you make appropriate backups before reinstalling from scratch.
    Once you have reinstalled the OS, you can upgrade it to the most recent version and see if the problem persists before installing any other software that may interfere with it.
    You really need to go through a process of elimination to find out whether the problem lies with the macbook or the router. However considering your iphone works fine, I would look towards the macbook first.

  • Self assigned IP Address, wireless doesn't work

    After upgrading to Leopard I keep getting "AirPort has a self-assigned IP address and may not be able to connect to the Internet." when I try to connect to the wireless network. Thus, wifi does not work at all. I've researched it best I can and it seems to be a problem with the router assigning an IP address to the mac, but why didn't this happen in Tiger? However if I play around with it for awhile it will randomly start working, but the same method doesn't fix it everytime. It also works fine in bootcamp. If I physically plug into the router, it works fine. This problem didn't exist in Tiger at all.
    Message was edited by: SuperDupe453

    Follow-up:
    On the two laptops, I finally managed to get on line by switching to a different wireless access point, on a different modem. I surmise that the communication between the Macbook DHCP client and the modem/router's DHCP server is less than 100% effective. Looking at the modem/router, I could see that all of the Macs had active connections. But, instead of showing the names of the Macs, the page showed a star (*) for each Mac. I had to compare Mac addresses to verify the connections. The MAC address, of course, is hard-wired into the computer's network interface. It appears that either the DHCP client didn't know what question to ask when it broadcast for an IP address, or it couldn't interpret the answer. Except in the case of the iMac, which worked perfectly.
    I upgraded the MacPro last, since it is my primary machine. Same story--connection with self-assigned address, which is useless. However, this time, having nothing left to lose, I restarted the modem/router, which presumably dumped any inactive connections and issued new DHCP leases.
    However, I do have a few words for the Apple GENIUSES! The Leopard network preferences page puts me in mind of a maintenance free battery. A few of the older folks will remember when you bought a car battery that had to be filled with distilled water to reconstitute the electrolyte. Then, periodically, you check the level of the liquid in the battery, and added distilled water when required. Adding water was required on occasion because some of the water would boil off under certain conditions. Then, we got the maintenance free battery, which is virtually identical to the older battery design, except that you don't have to perform the maintenance of replenishing the water. It turns out, however, that maintenance free batteries do vent on occasion, and should have water added. But, you can't add water because the battery is sealed. So, the difference between conventional and maintenance free is not that the maintenance free battery doesn't need maintenance, it is that you can't perform the maintenance without voiding the warranty.
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  • Rebuilding aMacBook 1.83 GHz Intel Core Duo, hard drive failure so rebuilding system.  Aircard will not stop self-assigning IP address.  Any ideas how to resolve successfully?

    Had hard drive failure on MacBook 1.83 GHz Intel Core Duo, so had to rebuild the OS on new drive. Was on Lion 10.7.5 prior to failure, but had to reinstall Snow Leopard 10.6.3 since that was most recent OS on media I had.  After finally getting ethernet connection to router working, was able to get to internet and download / upgrade to 10.6.8.  I assume I can probably buy the upgrade to Mountain Lion 10.8 from there.
    Problem is this, Airport will not stop self-assigning IP address for my wireless connection, and unless I can get wireless back on this laptop, doesn't make a lot of sense to continue the rebuild and reinstall of all the software that was on it prior to HD failure.  Only way to my home network and router is ethernet now.  Everything else on my network (Apple MacBook Pro laptops, iPhones, desktops, and non-Apple printers and laptops) is hooking up to router wirelessly fine.
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    When see the beachball cursor, note the exact time: hour, minute, second.  
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    Launch the Console application in any of the following ways:
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  • Self Assigned IP Address redux

    I am getting the "Self Assigned IP Address" in my Airport connection and I can't troubleshoot the problem.
    Here's my setup and what I have been looking to accomplish..
    I have an iMac G5 with a built-in Airport Extreme card running Leopard 10.5.3. I have created a network to provide my AppleTV and my work laptop with access to the internet. I've turned Internet sharing on, and have security set to a the WEP 128 key..
    Recently I had to exchange my AppleTV for a new one, and during the 2 weeks I was without AppleTV - something has changed (and as I think through the issue, I'm not certain about when the last time I played youtube or purchased content - maybe the new appleTV doesn't have anything to do with it, and it was a software upgrade), as I am no longer able to access YouTube content or the iTunes Music store to authorize my purchased content or to purchase new music/movies. However, I am able to watch movie trailers, and preview songs. It connects to the network fine, shows a strong signal, but something isn't quite right.
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    hey guys...I found the problem...it helped me very much just try to change the wireless mode from 11bgn mixed to 11bg mixed...do this from router settings . . .I guess this will help you

  • Self-assigned IP address, try to connect to pc

    I do a lot of file transferring from my mac to another pc laptop, so I've got them hooked together with an ethernet cable.  I had this issue in the past, where I'd try to connect but my network settings kept saying the "ethernet has a self-assigned IP address and will not be able to connect".  The solution I found to fixing this was to open up the Advanced Settings, and change the IPv6 configuration to "Link-local only" and then everything would work perfectly.
    I upgraded to Yosemite yesterday, however, and now that solution no longer works.  Still getting self-assigned IP.  How can I fix this??

    I checked my sharing options, and everything looks to be on.  I also have the yellow circle, but I can never get a connection unless it goes green.  Before I upgraded, that was the issue before; it would be yellow until I changed the IPv6 connection to "link-local only" and then the ethernet connection would change to green, and I'd have no issues.  Now, when I change it to "Link-local only" and hit apply, nothing happens, it's still yellow.
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  • CAN'T CONNECT-self-assigned IP address

    I haven't been able to connect to any networks for days. I keep getting this message in my network control panel under "status":
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    Ok, I have the fix!! After several frustrating days it finally just works.
    The process:
    Upgrade your Macs to 10.6 (Snow Leopard)
    Powercycle your modem AND time capsule / airport TWICE
    Reset your time capsule with a pin or paperclip on the back
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    Joshua

  • Self-assigned ip address -- can't connect to Airport

    I have a 2006 MacBook Pro which recently started exhibiting the exact same behaviour as reported by another poster in 2011:
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    The wifi icon shows no connection with the network -- the "!" mark.
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  • Self assigned ip address-Could someone help me?

    There are two Powerbooks in my house which connects wirelessly to the internet and an airport express that joins the existing wireless connection.
    When I'am using mine, I can connect without any problem, but when my girlfriend uses her mac we both get the self-assigned ip address. The only way to connect after that is by reseting the router.
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