For hosts with wired and wireless nics, utm does not allow multiple ip addresses to be set. For ipv4, where the unique mac addresses can be used to identify the wired and wireless nics, utm only allows one ipv4. If a laptop is connected to the network using the wired nic, then using the wireless nic, there will be an address collision. The only workaround is to allocate two hosts, one for wired and one for wireless. This is a duplication of effort and also wastes licences. It should be possible to assign as many addresses to a host as there are nics. This bug affects both ipv4 and ipv6, although with the DUID bug, there is no way to uniquely identify multiple nics.
Well the workaround for ipv4 is to create separate host definitions for each interface. As already discussed, this won't work with ipv6 because the duid is not unique among multiple interfaces on the same host.
Licensing is per ip so what you're claiming being an issue is exactly how the licensing was designed and should work.
Well the workaround for ipv4 is to create separate host definitions for each interface. As already discussed, this won't work with ipv6 because the duid is not unique among multiple interfaces on the same host.
Licensing is per ip so what you're claiming being an issue is exactly how the licensing was designed and should work.