As part of your network check, you need to verify your TCP/IP-configuration ( if you
intend
to use TCP/IP-protocol):
- Properties of "My Network Places"
on your Desktop, then
- Properties of "Local Area Connection":

- then click on "Internet Protocol (TCP/IP)"
and select the button "Properties":

Windows 2000 has configured TCP/IP "to
Obtain an IP address automatically" , i.e. via
DHCP.
Lets verify the current TCP/IP configuration:
Unluckily, I could not find the equivalent of the Win95/98 utility
"winipcfg", so I use the same
utility as under NT4: "IPCONFIG"
- select from your Start-Menu: "Programs" /
"Accessories" / "Command Prompt",
- enter: IPCONFIG

Note the info, that the IP-address has been generated by the
"Autoconfiguration", not via
DHCP.
( IPCONFIG can also be used to request a new IP-address:
to ReNew the IP-address )
| Note: when
booting Windows2000, the start-up process will NOT wait
for the DHCP / IP-Autoconfiguration process to be completed (as on Windows98, where this causes a boot-delay of several seconds). When making quickly the Login and using IPCONFIG, the IP-address may not yet be established, the system will then display as IP-address 0.0.0.0 : ![]() Without an IP-address, the network is NOT operational ! After a few more seconds, the search for a DHCP-server will time-out, then the IP-Autoconfiguration process will assigned the IP-address. ( you have the possibility to disable the Auto IP-address generation ). If you tried to access the "My Network Places" / "Computers Near Me" during the time, where the IP-address was not yet assigned, you will get an error message: ![]() |
![]() |
If you do not like to use the
Command-Prompt window, you can view this information also via the Control-Panel : "Administrative Tools" in the "Computer Management" |
Look under "System
Tools" / "System Information"
/"Components" /"Network"
/ "Adapter":

search in the right plane for your network adapter (example: the
Realtec RTL8029) , it may be
defined multiple times in the list. If you find as IP-address:
"Not Available", continue to scroll down:

As Windows98, Windows2000 tries first to find a DHCP-server on
the network.
If this fails, it then uses its own "AutoConfiguration"
method to generate an IP-address. In such
cases, the "DHCP Server" in
Computer Management (see above) is marked as 255.255.255.0.
( you have the possibility to Disable the Auto IP-address generation )
In case that a DHCP-server is found on the network and the
DHCP-server assigns an IP-address,
then IPCONFIG shows a slightly different information:

In "Computer Management", it
will list the IP-address of the DHCP-server, which assigned the
IP-address to this system:

But a lot of networks work with a
predefined range of IP-addresses (which
also shortens the Boot-up time
of Win98 and Windows2000, since they do not have to wait anymore
for the request to a DHCP-server to time-out):
![]() |
My home-network uses the IP-range reserved for private networks: 192.168.x.y, so I am assigning manually the IP-address: 192.168.1.2 |
Nice new feature on Windows 2000: after changing the IP-address,
it is NOT anymore
required to restart the system (like on Win95/98/Nt4), so I can
run again "IPCONFIG"
to check the change:

A last low-level check to verify, that the network is working,
using the
TCP/IP diagnostic
tool "PING" to test the
connection to another system on the network:

If PING does not get a reply, verify your TCP/IP settings and trouble-shoot
your
network card and cables.