DHCP Server Configuration:
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Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol
(DHCP) automatically assigns IP addresses and other network configuration
information (subnetmask, broadcast address, etc) to computers on a network. A
client configured for DHCP will send out a broadcast request to the DHCP server
requesting an address. The DHCP server will then issue a "lease" and
assign it to that client. The time period of a valid lease can be specified on
the server. DHCP reduces the ammount of time required to configure clients and
allows one to move a computer to various networks and be configured with the
appropriate IP address, gateway and subnet mask. For ISP's it conserves the
limited number of IP addresses it may use. DHCP servers may assign a
"static" IP address to specified hardware. Microsoft NetBios
information is often included in the network information sent by the DHCP
server.
DHCP assignment:
1.
Lease Request: Client broadcasts
request to DHCP server with a source address of 0.0.0.0 and a destination
address of 255.255.255.255. The request includes the MAC address which is used
to direct the reply.
2.
IP lease offer: DHCP server replies
with an IP address, subnet mask, network gateway, name of the domain, name
servers, duration of the lease and the IP address of the DHCP server.
3.
Lease Selection: Client recieves
offer and broadcasts to al DHCP servers that will accept given offer so that
other DHCP server need not make an offer.
4.
The DHCP server then sends an ack to
the client. The client is configured to use TCP/IP.
5.
Lease Renewal: When half of the
lease time has expired, the client will issue a new request to the DHCP server.
Starting DHCP server: service
dhcpd start
(or /etc/rc.d/init.d/dhcpd start for Red Hat, Fedora and CentOS Linux distributions)
(or /etc/rc.d/init.d/dhcpd start for Red Hat, Fedora and CentOS Linux distributions)
Sample DHCP server config file: (DHCP v3.0.1) /etc/dhcpd.conf
(See /usr/share/doc/dhcp-3.X/dhcp.conf.sample)
(See /usr/share/doc/dhcp-3.X/dhcp.conf.sample)
ddns-update-style interim; #
Required for dhcp 3.0+ / Red Hat 8.0+
ignore client-updates;
subnet 192.168.1.0 netmask 255.255.255.0 {
range 192.168.1.128 192.168.1.254; # Range of IP addresses to be issued to DHCP clients
option
subnet-mask
255.255.255.0; #
Default subnet mask to be used by DHCP clients
option
broadcast-address
192.168.1.255; #
Default broadcastaddress to be used by DHCP clients
option
routers 192.168.1.1; # Default gateway to be used by
DHCP clients
option
domain-name
"your-domain.org";
option
domain-name-servers 40.175.42.254,
40.175.42.253; #
Default DNS to be used by DHCP clients
option
netbios-name-servers
192.168.1.100; #
Specify a WINS server for MS/Windows clients.
# (Optional. Specify if used on your network)
# DHCP
requests are not forwarded. Applies when there is more than one ethernet
device and forwarding is configured.
# option
ipforwarding off;
default-lease-time 21600; # Amount of
time in seconds that a client may keep the IP address
max-lease-time 43200;
option
time-offset -18000; # Eastern Standard Time
# option
ntp-servers
192.168.1.1; #
Default NTP server to be used by DHCP clients
# option
netbios-name-servers 192.168.1.1;
# --- Selects point-to-point node (default is hybrid).
Don't change this unless you understand Netbios very well
# option
netbios-node-type 2;
# We want
the nameserver "ns2" to appear at a fixed address.
# Name server with this specified MAC address will recieve this IP. host ns2 { next-server ns2.your-domain.com; hardware ethernet 00:02:c3:d0:e5:83; fixed-address 40.175.42.254; } # Laser printer obtains IP address via DHCP. This assures that the # printer with this MAC address will get this IP address every time. host laser-printer-lex1 { hardware ethernet 08:00:2b:4c:a3:82; fixed-address 192.168.1.120; } } |
Test configuration file for errors
with the following command: /etc/rc.d/init.d/dhcpd
configtest
(Other distributions may use: /usr/sbin/dhcpd -f)
(Other distributions may use: /usr/sbin/dhcpd -f)
Note: The MAC addresses for the
static address name server (ns2.your-domain.com),
can be obtained with the command /sbin/ifconfig:
can be obtained with the command /sbin/ifconfig:
eth0 Link
encap:Ethernet HWaddr 00:02:C3:D0:E5:83
inet
addr:40.175.42.254
Bcast:40.175.42.255 Mask:255.255.255.0
inet6
addr: fe80::202:b3ff:fef0:e484/64 Scope:Link
UP
BROADCAST RUNNING MULTICAST
MTU:1500 Metric:1
RX
packets:4070 errors:0 dropped:0 overruns:0 frame:0
TX
packets:3878 errors:0 dropped:0 overruns:0 carrier:0
collisions:0 txqueuelen:1000
RX
bytes:3406445 (3.2 MiB) TX
bytes:439612 (429.3 KiB)
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When dhcpd is running it will
generate entries in the file: /var/lib/dhcp/dhcpd.leases
lease 192.168.1.128 {
starts 2 2004/12/01 20:07:05; ends 3 2004/12/02 08:07:05; hardware ethernet 00:00:e8:4a:2c:5c; uid 01:00:00:e8:4c:5d:31; client-hostname "Node1"; } |
LANs separated by routers: In order to have your DHCP broadcast pass through a router
on the the next network, one must configure the router to allow DHCP relay.
(Cisco: ip-helper
address, Juniper: dhcp-relay) The local lan subnet{ }
configuration must come before the configuration directives of the remote LANs.
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