You can add a second IP to the sane NIC if the NIC is not set to DHCP.
Which means that you either:
- Need to get a fixed IP for your work laptop, so you can do this.
- go to start, settings, control panel, network connections
- Select the LAN and go to properties
- Go to advanced, tab "IP settings" and add a second IP
- Or still need to:
- write down the current IP/netmask
- go to start, settings, control panel, network connections.
- Select the LAN and go to properties.
- Unmark DHCP. Set a manual IP as written own in the first step.
- Go to advanced, tab IP settings and add a second IP.
- Or use a second network card for the second IP (usually the easiest way)
- Or install additional software for more network management.
I assume the last is not an option on corporate networks.
- Or you can install a VM and configure that to the alternate IP. (Probably only useful if you already use VM and do not want to break existing connections from your main desktop).
(In XP)
(In win7)
http://answers.microsoft.com has this as a C sharp solution for win 7:
However it has no explanation as to why it works, how it works, or how it has to be used.
public class IPAdder
{
[DllImport("iphlpapi.dll", EntryPoint = "AddIPAddress", SetLastError = true)]
private static extern UInt32 MyAddIPAddress(UInt32 Address, UInt32 IpMaskint, int IfIndex,
out IntPtr NTEContext, out IntPtr NTEInstance);
public IPAdder()
{ }
public static void AddIPAddress(String IPAddress, String SubnetMask, int ifIndex)
{
System.Net.
IPAddress IPAdd = System.Net.IPAddress.Parse(IPAddress);
System.Net.
IPAddress SubNet = System.Net.IPAddress.Parse(SubnetMask);
unsafe
{
int MyNTEContext = 0;
int MyNTEInstance = 0;
IntPtr ptrMyNTEContext = new IntPtr(MyNTEContext);
IntPtr ptrMyNTEInstance = new IntPtr(MyNTEInstance);
UInt32 Result = MyAddIPAddress((uint)IPAdd.Address,
(uint)SubNet.Address,ifIndex, out ptrMyNTEContext, out ptrMyNTEInstance);
};
}
}
public IPAddress Get37()
{
IPAddress ipa = IPAddress.Any;
// check network interfaces
foreach (NetworkInterface ni in NetworkInterface.GetAllNetworkInterfaces())
{
if ((ni.OperationalStatus != OperationalStatus.Up) ||
(ni.NetworkInterfaceType ==NetworkInterfaceType.Loopback) ||
(ni.NetworkInterfaceType == NetworkInterfaceType.Tunnel))
continue;
if ((ni.Description.IndexOf("virtual", StringComparison.OrdinalIgnoreCase) >= 0) ||
(ni.Name.IndexOf("virtual", StringComparison.OrdinalIgnoreCase) >= 0))
continue;
if (ni.Description.Equals("Microsoft Loopback Adapter", StringComparison.OrdinalIgnoreCase))
continue;
IPInterfaceProperties ipip = ni.GetIPProperties();
bool found37 = false;
foreach (IPAddressInformation unic in ipip.UnicastAddresses)
{
string strip = unic.Address.ToString();
if (strip == "37.0.0.1")
{
ipa = unic.Address;
found37 = true;
break;
}
}
if (!found37)
{
IPAdder.AddIPAddress("37.0.0.1", "255.255.255.0",
(int)(uint)ni.GetType().GetField("index", System.Reflection.BindingFlags.Public | System.Reflection.BindingFlags.NonPublic | System.Reflection.BindingFlags.Instance).GetValue(ni));
ipa =IPAddress.Parse("37.0.0.1");
}
break;
}
return ipa;
}
[Edit2]
If external software is allowed then Win IP config seems to do the job.
(screenshot was from v2.7. Link has now been changed to v4
).
WinIPConfig works well with DHCP, AND a domain controller, on Windows 10. The software page is not up to date though, there is a version 4 out. Check out the author's post: http://www.pkostov.com/wordpress/?p=19
– Jerther – 2016-09-26T15:09:15.247This is all interesting info but I'm pretty sure there was a way to add a second IP address/mask combination while using DHCP, at least on XP (not sure if it's still possible on 7). I recall there was not GUI (you had to edit registry or run a command). – Álvaro González – 2013-03-26T09:14:32.727
I found the link (see my question's edit) but it doesn't seem to work :( – Álvaro González – 2013-03-26T09:42:44.030
I added two ways which should work. (Some code and an 3rd party tool). I still think it should be possible with native windows (7) commands somehow. – Hennes – 2013-03-26T18:54:48.970