09-24-2020 10:55 AM
I have multiple sites sending alerts for IP conflicts recently. It is only iPhones, and only on our wireless. I have SSIDs and a VLAN setup dedicated just to mobile phones, and the MX running as DHCP server for that VLAN. This was not an issue until two or three weeks ago but we are getting two to three alerts for different sites almost every day. Anyone have any idea where to start looking on how to fix this? Is this another iOS bug?
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09-24-2020 11:49 AM
This is from Apple and what is causing this issue.
To further protect your privacy, your iPhone, iPad, iPod touch, or Apple Watch can use a different MAC address with each Wi-Fi network.
To communicate with a Wi-Fi network, a device must identify itself to the network using a unique network address called a media access control (MAC) address. If the device always uses the same Wi-Fi MAC address across all networks, network operators and other network observers can more easily relate that address to the device's network activity and location over time. This allows a kind of user tracking or profiling, and it applies to all devices on all Wi-Fi networks.
To reduce this privacy risk, iOS 14, iPadOS 14, and watchOS 7 use a different MAC address for each Wi-Fi network. This unique, static MAC address is your device's private Wi-Fi address for that network only.
09-24-2020 11:09 AM
Check network settings. iOS made an update that randomizes MAC addresses.
09-24-2020 11:17 AM
iOS 14 makes randomizes MAC addresses default. You have some options. You can turn that feature off in network settings on the devices, you can disable the annoying alerts from Meraki Dashboard. You can try a shorter DHCP lease time.
There are probably other options too. It is not an Apple bug or specific to Apple though. AFAIK, Android and Windows, etc. do this also, but may not be enabled at default. Since Apple prides itself on their privacy and security posture it makes sense they turned it on at default.
I know I am drifting off topic, but ultimately this is a "good thing" because MAC addresses are way too easy to connect to a person and that means good and bad actors can track you too easily and without your permission so it needs to stop somehow..
09-24-2020 11:20 AM
On Sept 1, Apple released the 13.7 update that pertains to Covid tracing. My guess, since it's only started happening in the last couple weeks and only to iPhones, is the update is intent on trying to keep the same IP address for continuity of tracking. We all know how that goes when it comes to DHCP requests.
ETA- iOS 14 is only a week old, so while the randomized MAC address might be the issue, it wouldn't have started a couple weeks ago.
09-24-2020 11:49 AM
This is from Apple and what is causing this issue.
To further protect your privacy, your iPhone, iPad, iPod touch, or Apple Watch can use a different MAC address with each Wi-Fi network.
To communicate with a Wi-Fi network, a device must identify itself to the network using a unique network address called a media access control (MAC) address. If the device always uses the same Wi-Fi MAC address across all networks, network operators and other network observers can more easily relate that address to the device's network activity and location over time. This allows a kind of user tracking or profiling, and it applies to all devices on all Wi-Fi networks.
To reduce this privacy risk, iOS 14, iPadOS 14, and watchOS 7 use a different MAC address for each Wi-Fi network. This unique, static MAC address is your device's private Wi-Fi address for that network only.
09-24-2020 11:55 AM
Thanks - This is a big help. We were wondering why we kept getting conflict alerts all of a sudden.
09-24-2020 12:56 PM
Hey everyone, MX Support Specialist chiming in here.
We opened up a case with Apple this morning, because it looks like iOS devices with this feature enabled are doing something a little weird with ARP requests:
If you look at frame 548 in that packet capture screenshot, you can see that it's an ARP response sourced from one MAC address, but saying that the IP in question belongs to a completely different MAC address.
Then, later on, in 964, you see it respond again, but this time it says the IP, correctly, belongs to the same MAC as what's seen in the Ethernet source address.
It's this disparity that's causing these duplicate IP alerts, because MX's rely on ARP mappings to verify that two devices aren't trying to both use the same IP address.
Once we have a better idea on how they plan to address this, I'll be sure to share what updates I can provide here.
09-24-2020 01:12 PM
Thanks @alexapie Good to know. Subscribing to and bookmarking this post now..
Not totally off topic, but I read about a change to the way iOS 14 handles DNS today. You might be interested: https://mailman.nanog.org/pipermail/nanog/2020-September/209823.html
Best.
09-27-2020 10:11 AM
@alexapie I believe this is the way Apple handles Bonjour sleep proxying, but recently it seems to have extended to more devices than just Apple TVs and HomePods that respond to ARPs on behalf of a sleeping client. It seems like if a client wants to go into deep sleep, it picks another awake client to answer on behalf of its IP.
10-01-2020 03:10 PM
I notice Apple released an update in the last day or two. I just installed it and the notes referenced a bug fix that might help the phone get on a wifi network. Anyone know if this fixed our problem?
10-01-2020 03:13 PM
Unfortunately, we tested iOS 14.0.1 this morning, and still noticed the same bug; we submitted our findings to Apple today, so hopefully that means we'll have some kind of update to share on this soon.
10-06-2020 08:26 AM
Apple's currently investigating our report, and isn't asking for any new data. As before, once I have more to share, I will do so.
10-13-2020 11:52 AM
Thanks for following up @alexapie! Replying to this thread so that I can follow it and add my voice to the choir - this has been an issue for us as well. Hopeful for a resolution!
10-22-2020 08:50 AM
This is inline with my version of the issue. The MAC address that iOS has assigned to another Wi-Fi network is the one Meraki shows as in conflict on my Z1's wi-fi network. Checking settings on the iPhone, one of the private MACs is assigned to the Z1 wi-fi connection. The other MAC is assigned to another wi-fi connection. That other network doesn't assign the same IP address range, or anything like that. Looking forward to an iOS update!
10-22-2020 11:15 AM
Hey everyone,
We've confirmed that a fix for this is in iOS 14.2 Beta 3, so when the 14.2 release is finalized, that means this problem should hopefully start to drop away.
Here's hoping you're not dealing with too much more noise in the mean time!
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