Static IP question


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Hi all. I’ve been reading these threads forever, thought I’d finally post my own questions 🙂 I’ve gained a lot of insight from all of you contributing to the forums and I’d like to thank you. This particular question of mine has to do with static IP addresses.

First of, I’m very novice at this and trying to better my system as I gain some knowledge from my readings. I’ve read several times that, if you create static IPs for your Sonos devices, it’s important to configure them outside of the DHCP range. Can someone please elaborate a bit on this? I’ve posted some screenshots below of what I’ve done. I was able to select all of my Sonos products from the client list and give them static IP assignments, but I don’t think they’re outside of my DHCP? One screenshot is of my assignment list, and the other is what I think my DHCP range is - is it 100-200? So would I want to assign the suffixes, or last three digits, at something under 100 or over 200? If so, why have an assignment list in the first place? Thank you all again and looking forward to your insight.

 

 


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Ah. That probably gives some insight on signal strength as well I would think - which player connects to the controller the quickest.

Not necessarily, but connection latency is one of the possible factors. Also, how busy each player is on other tasks when the controller issues the discovery broadcast. As I say, the Associated Product can change during the session, for other reasons.

It’s not terribly relevant to the user in everyday usage. Regular playback control commands are sent directly to whichever player (room) has controller focus, irrespective of the Associated Product.

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Ah. That probably gives some insight on signal strength as well I would think - which player connects to the controller the quickest. You guys are the best, so glad I joined the forum. I’ve learned so much the last couple of days. Hope to be able to give back at some point. Thank you, have a great weekend!

It Seems the “Associated Product” IP keeps changing. Is this normal?

Yes. It’s the player the controller uses to obtain information from the system. Typically it’s the first player to respond to discovery when the controller starts. It can subsequently change during the session.

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Thanks Belly & ratty! The IPs for each product in Sonos System Info seem to be staying true to what they were assigned. It Seems the “Associated Product” IP keeps changing. Is this normal?

 

 

It sounds like the router just needs to age out the leases for the old IPs. One could always reboot it to speed things along.

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At least the assigned IPs are showing correctly in Sonos.
 

The discovered client list may or may not refresh... eventually, a reboot if the router should flush it.

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Power cycled the kitchen and bathroom. Still showing up under old IP in discovered clients table and new Static Lease IP I assigned outside of the pool. Work fine. That is what’s showing up in the router. However, in the Sonos ap they are showing the new IPs, the ones I assigned outside of the pool. All of the products are, not just the ones I power cycled.

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Just power cycle one and see what IP it picks up

If the router accepted the reservation then the DHCP server should assign that IP the next time the relevant MAC address requests a lease.

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However you may have to reserve IP in the DHCP scope, quicker just to enlarge it to cover the IPs you used.

Sorry Belly, not understanding this one. My pool is set to 100-200. I created IPs outside of the pool. If I increase the pool isn’t that counterintuitive? I thought the point was to go outside of the pool. 

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So I can either run around power cycling everything or wait until each product cycles on its own? I would prefer the latter.  Is there benefit to either?

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The IPs are leased for a certain amount of time, when they “expire” the Sonos devices will get the new IP from your router.

 

if you power cycle one speaker it will get the new IP that you reserved.

However you may have to reserve IP in the DHCP scope, quicker just to enlarge it to cover the IPs you used.

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Is it normal that my products are still showing up in the discovered clients list with IP addresses within the DHCP pool even though I’ve assigned new IPs away from the pool? So Master Bedroom, for example, shows up under discovered clients at 192.68.5.109 and also under Static Assignments as 192.168.5.201. Weird?

 

 

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That is also mine. I created one for the static IP question and one for the matrix question. The IP subject here ended up on the matrix topic.

There’s a second thread on the subject.

 

 

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Understood. Great information, thanks again ratty!

You’re wasting your time with the extra Boosts. 

With that number of rooms “play everywhere” could put a bit of strain on the wireless depending on the audio content bandwidth. For example lossless FLAC would be much more onerous than, say, a typical internet radio station. 

Also understand that the first room, from which you “play everywhere”, is the Group Coordinator. This does the heavy lifting, fetching the stream and sending it to the other group members. If it’s on a weaker wireless connection -- or happens to be being hit with interference -- it could struggle. Ideally pick a wired device, or at least one close to the root Boost, to start from. 

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I see, thanks ratty. So in your opinion, the matrix is good? System is working great. Only issues I get is cut out when I select everything (“play everywhere”). It eventually falls into place but isn’t an immediate cycle as I’d like it to be. I’m wasting time by running around the house with Boosts?

The colours in the left column are immaterial if your system’s performing correctly, as it most probably should with the (green) signal strengths indicated. They merely show where the wireless chipsets are doing their job in rejecting interference.

BTW at those signal strengths the wireless Boosts will always be ignored. They’re just warming the room.

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Got it. I’ve been struggling with 2 additional wireless boosts to negate the red. Placing them all over the house and re-running matrix. This is the first time I’ve seen it down to 2 so got a little excited lol Already switched WiFi channel to 11.

The matrix shows what’s happening at the SonosNet PHY and data link layers. IP runs at the network layer, over the top of anything and everything.

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That’s just a coincidence, reserved IPs won’t help your matrix, but choosing a different channel on your router may.

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And I must say, significant matrix improvement. I’ve posted before and after matrix screenshots. Wow.

 

 

 

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Done. Started at 201 and worked up. Did not reboot anything. 

 

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No need for a reboot.