What is the IP address and subnet mask of the Ethernet adapter Local Area network Connection

After running the Hardware Setup steps of the installer, if the radio is still not detected, you can attempt to configure the network interface manually via the Windows Network Connections App or the command prompt.

Configure Ethernet Connection Via Windows Network Connections App

  1. Open the Control Panel from the Windows® icon in the lower left corner of your monitor.

    In the Control Panel window, make sure View by is set to Category.

  2. Click Network and Internet.

    What is the IP address and subnet mask of the Ethernet adapter Local Area network Connection

  3. Click Network and Sharing Center.

    What is the IP address and subnet mask of the Ethernet adapter Local Area network Connection

  4. Click Change adapter settings in the left pane.

    What is the IP address and subnet mask of the Ethernet adapter Local Area network Connection

  5. Sort the adapters by clicking the More options button, and then selecting . Double-click the adapter to configure to open its properties.

    What is the IP address and subnet mask of the Ethernet adapter Local Area network Connection

    On this computer, the adapter with the name Ethernet indicates connectivity to the Internet, but the connectivity of Ethernet 2 indicates No network access. Double-click the Ethernet 2 adapter to open its properties.

  6. On the Networking tab, clear Clients for Microsoft Networks and File and Printer Sharing for Microsoft Networks. These services can cause intermittent connection problems with USRP™ radios. To configure the IP address, double-click Internet Protocol Version 4 (TCP/IPv4).

    What is the IP address and subnet mask of the Ethernet adapter Local Area network Connection

  7. On the General tab, the default setting is typically set to Obtain an IP address automatically.

    What is the IP address and subnet mask of the Ethernet adapter Local Area network Connection

    Select Use the following IP Address. Set the host IP address to 192.168.10.X, where X is any integer from 1 to 255 except 2. Leave the Subnet mask set to its default (255.255.255.0).

    If your radio is on another subnet, meaning the first three octets of the IP address field are not 192.168.30, then enter the IP address values of your radio for the first three octets. See Check Subnet Values on Host and Radio.

    What is the IP address and subnet mask of the Ethernet adapter Local Area network Connection

  8. This step is optional. X3xx radios and N3xx radios provide 10GigE interface to communicate with the host computer. To use the 10GigE interface for these radios, set the jumbo packet size to 9014 bytes.

    On the Networking tab, click on the Configure tab and navigate to Advanced setting option. Set the Jumbo Packet property value to 9014 bytes.

    What is the IP address and subnet mask of the Ethernet adapter Local Area network Connection

  9. Click OK.

  10. The host computer configuration is complete. Continue to Verify USRP Hardware Connection.

Configure Ethernet Connection Via Windows Command Prompt

Use these commands to determine the IP address of the radio. After determining the IP address for the radio, update the network interface IP address, and ping the radio to verify that the host-to-radio connection is working.

  1. View the list of network interfaces, by entering this command at the Windows command prompt.

    For the host computer used in this example, this is the output.

    "Connection Name","Network Adapter","Physical Address","Transport Name"
    "Ethernet","Intel(R) Ethernet Connection (2) I218-LM","6C-0B-84-A9-7F-FE",
        "\Device\Tcpip_{24EC4E6B-0552-4055-995C-3A404E3FE21F}"
    "vEthernet (Default Switch)","Hyper-V Virtual Ethernet Adapter","02-15-03-00-A9-6A",
        "\Device\Tcpip_{9BE08276-A58E-43EF-B928-0B215F3169A3}"
    "Ethernet 2","ASIX AX88179 USB 3.0 to Gigabit Ethernet Adapter","8C-AE-4C-F4-F4-E8",
        "Media disconnected"

  2. Determine which Ethernet adapter is used for the internet connection by pinging the IP address associated with each Connection Name returned. When you identify the connection name of the network adapter connected to the Internet, avoid selecting that network adapter for the radio. For more information, see Host Computer Ethernet Options.

    The host computer in this example uses the "Ethernet" connection name for the Internet connection. Run the netsh command with this syntax to get the IP address of "Ethernet". Then ping that IP address to a website. Since the host computer uses this network adapter for its internet connection, reconfiguring this adapter to connect to the radio would jeopardize your ability to connect to the Internet. See Using One Ethernet Port.

    C:\>netsh interface ip show address "Ethernet"

    Configuration for interface "Ethernet"
        DHCP enabled:     Yes
        IP Address:       172.21.18.178
        Subnet Prefix:    172.21.18.0/24 (mask 255.255.255.0)
        Default Gateway:  172.21.18.1
        Gateway Metric:   0
        InterfaceMetric:  25

    C:\>ping -S “172.21.18.178” www.mathworks.com

    Pinging ms-www.mathworks.com [144.212.244.17] from 172.21.18.178 with 32 bytes of data:
    Reply from 144.212.244.17: bytes=32 time<1ms TTL=251
    Reply from 144.212.244.17: bytes=32 time<1ms TTL=251
    Reply from 144.212.244.17: bytes=32 time<1ms TTL=251
    Reply from 144.212.244.17: bytes=32 time<1ms TTL=251

  3. Next we run the netsh command specifying the "Ethernet 2" connection name. DHCP is typically enabled for an adapter that is not statically configured. Since the host computer does not use this network adapter for its internet connection, reconfiguring this adapter to connect to the radio, does not jeopardize your ability to connect to the Internet. That makes it a good adapter to use for the host-to-radio connection.

    C:\>netsh interface ip show address "Ethernet 2"

    Configuration for interface "Ethernet 2"
      DHCP enabled: Yes
      InterfaceMetric: 5

  4. Connect the radio to this USB-Ethernet adapter. Wait for a few seconds, and then check the setting again. The response for a successful host-to-radio connection resembles the output shown here.

    C:\>netsh interface ip show address "Ethernet 2"

    Configuration for interface "Ethernet 2"
      DHCP enabled: Yes
      IP Address: 169.254.55.226
      Subnet Prefix: 169.254.0.0/16 (mask 255.255.0.0)
      InterfaceMetric: 25

    The IP address 169.254.55.226 is a private IP address automatically assigned by Windows to the Ethernet adapter. To discover the IP address of your radio, ping the broadcast address 169.254.255.255. This address corresponds to the subnet prefix 169.254.0.0. The response for a successful ping resembles the output shown here.

    C:\>ping -S 169.254.55.226 169.254.255.255

    Pinging 169.254.255.255 from 169.254.55.226 with 32 bytes of data:
    Reply from 192.168.30.7: bytes=32 time=1ms TTL=32
    Reply from 192.168.30.7: bytes=32 time=1ms TTL=32
    Reply from 192.168.30.7: bytes=32 time=2ms TTL=32
    Reply from 192.168.30.7: bytes=32 time=1ms TTL=32
    
    Ping statistics for 169.254.255.255:
      Packets: Sent = 4, Received = 4, Lost = 0 (0% loss),
    Approximate round trip times in milli-seconds:
      Minimum = 1ms, Maximum = 2ms, Average = 1ms

  5. Based on the discovered radio IP address 192.168.30.7, assign an IP address to the Ethernet adapter from the same subnet, such as 192.168.30.1. Use a subnet mask of 255.255.255.0.

    C:\>netsh interface ip set address "Ethernet 2" static 192.168.30.1 255.255.255.0

Verify that the updated IP address for the Ethernet adapter.

netsh interface ip show address "Ethernet 2"

Configuration for interface "Ethernet 2"
    DHCP enabled:    No
    IP Address:      192.168.30.1
    Subnet Prefix:   192.168.30.0/24 (mask 255.255.255.0)
    InterfaceMetric: 25

Verify that the host computer can ping the IP address assigned to the radio.

Pinging 192.168.30.7 with 32 bytes of data:
Reply from 192.168.30.7: bytes=32 time=1ms TTL=32
Reply from 192.168.30.7: bytes=32 time=1ms TTL=32
Reply from 192.168.30.7: bytes=32 time=1ms TTL=32
Reply from 192.168.30.7: bytes=32 time=1ms TTL=32

Ping statistics for 192.168.30.7:
    Packets: Sent = 4, Received = 4, Lost = 0 (0% loss),
Approximate round trip times in milli-seconds:
    Minimum = 1ms, Maximum = 1ms, Average = 1ms

Configure FastSendDatagramThreshold Registry Key

Ettus Research™ recommends configuring the FastSendDatagramThreshold with the value of 2048 (decimal). Define or reconfigure the FastSendDatagramThreshold registry key in the Windows Registry Editor under HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SYSTEM\CurrentControlSet\services\AFD\Parameters.

Note

X3xx radios and N3xx radios provide 10GigE interface to communicate with the host computer. To use the 10GigE interface for these radios, configure the FastSendDatagramThreshold with the value of 65536 (decimal).

What is the IP address and subnet mask of the Ethernet adapter Local Area network Connection

  • Manual USRP Radio Support Package Hardware Setup

What is the IP address of the wireless adapter local area network connection?

To view the IP address of a wireless adapter, double-click Wireless Network Connection and click the Support tab, then click Details and the window that appears will display the IP address.

What is Ethernet adapter Local Area Connection?

Ethernet Adapter Local Area Connection 2 identifies a disconnected media state, a description, and the physical MAC address for that port. The numeric value following the Windows logical friendly name refers to the network connection number.

What is the IP address for Ethernet?

Type “cmd” in the text box and then click “Okay”. In the window that pops up, type “ipconfig /all” and hit Enter. In the information that results, look for “Physical Address….:”. It will be listed under “Ethernet adapter Local Area Connection”.

What is my LAN subnet mask?

On Windows Go to Control Panel > Network and Sharing Centre. Click on your network name and then click Details. You will find the subnet mask along with other network details.