Random MAC address - why?

Man of Honour
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MAC addresses are supposed to be fixed, right? Well not in my case. I kept getting new network adapters appear every time I rebooted my laptop and sat down to investigate last night.

Turns out that every time I reboot, the MAC address of my wired network adapter changes.

I've eliminated all driver and OS-related issues (PXE boot handily displays the MAC address, so there's not even an OS loaded at that point).

Anyone got any ideas?

System: Asus UL30A. Chipset: Atheros AR8132
 
Caporegime
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Dodgy BIOS battery? They're not really as fixed as claimed but obviously it shouldn't be changing when you reboot.
 
Man of Honour
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Well, the system BIOS settings (inc. RTC) are fine, so that battery is good.

I wouldn't mind so much if it didn't keep forgetting network settings because it's considered a new adapter. Having 20+ defunct network adapters probably isn't a good idea either.

I could get around most of it in Linux with some udev magic, but no such luck in Windows.
 

J.B

J.B

Soldato
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Very odd. Is there any similiarity to the MACs? Im thinking specifically about the first 6 digits which identifies the manufacturer. I've never seen anything like that before.

When you do a PXE boot is the MAC different each time there as well?
 
Man of Honour
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Yes, there is similarity. Seems to be one of 64K addresses - i.e. xx:xx:00:00:xx:xx through xx:xx:FF:FF:xx:xx.

MAC address does indeed follow this pattern during PXE boot.

I've found a few other reports of this with ASUS and/or Gigabyte boards. Something to do with them being assigned an invalid MAC. I don't recall this machine doing this when it was new, however.
 

J.B

J.B

Soldato
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Very odd, the only thing I could think ofis a faulty controller chip on the motherboard.

If you have a spare tenner and PCI port its probably worth picking up a new NIC as the easiest solution.
 

J.B

J.B

Soldato
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Ahh, if its covered under warranty then Id deff send it back. Thats got to be a hardware fault.
 
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