- Configuring the Cisco IOS DHCP Server
- DHCP Client Option 12
- IPv6 Access Services: DHCPv6 Prefix Delegation
- IPv6 Access Services: DHCPv6 Relay Agent
- DHCP Client
- DHCPv6 Server Stateless Autoconfiguration
- DHCPv6 Server Timer Options
- DHCPv6 Individual Address Assignment
- DHCPv6 Ethernet Remote ID Option
- DHCPv6 Relay—Reload Persistent Interface ID Option
- DHCP Server Port-Based Address Allocation
- DHCP Relay Agent Support for Unnumbered Interfaces
- DHCPv6 Repackaging
- DHCP—DHCPv6 Guard
- Index
- Finding Feature Information
- Prerequisites for Configuring the DHCP Server
- Information About the Cisco IOS DHCP Server
- How to Configure the Cisco IOS DHCP Server
- Configuring a DHCP Database Agent or Disabling Conflict Logging
- Excluding IP Addresses
- Configuring DHCP Address Pools
- Configuring Manual Bindings
- Configuring DHCP Static Mapping
- Customizing DHCP Server Operation
- Configuring a Remote Device to Import DHCP Server Options from a Central DHCP Server
- Configuring DHCP Address Allocation Using Option 82
- Configuring a Static Route with the Next-Hop Dynamically Obtained Through DHCP
- Clearing DHCP Server Variables
- Configuration Examples for the Cisco IOS DHCP Server
- Example: Configuring the DHCP Database Agent
- Example: Excluding IP Addresses
- Example: Configuring DHCP Address Pools
- Example: Configuring a DHCP Address Pool with Multiple Disjoint Subnets
- Example: Configuring Manual Bindings
- Example: Configuring Static Mapping
- Example: Configuring the Option to Ignore all BOOTP Requests
- Example: Importing DHCP Options
- Example: Configuring DHCP Address Allocation Using Option 82
- Example: Configuring a Static Route with the Next-Hop Dynamically Obtained Through DHCP
- Additional References for Cisco IOS DHCP Server
- Feature Information for the Cisco IOS DHCP Server
Configuring the Cisco IOS DHCP Server
Cisco devices running Cisco software include Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol (DHCP) server and the relay agent software. The Cisco IOS DHCP server is a full DHCP server implementation that assigns and manages IP addresses from specified address pools within the device to DHCP clients. The DHCP server can be configured to assign additional parameters such as the IP address of the Domain Name System (DNS) server and the default device.
This module describes the concepts and the tasks needed to configure the Cisco IOS DHCP server.
- Finding Feature Information
- Prerequisites for Configuring the DHCP Server
- Information About the Cisco IOS DHCP Server
- How to Configure the Cisco IOS DHCP Server
- Configuration Examples for the Cisco IOS DHCP Server
- Additional References for Cisco IOS DHCP Server
- Feature Information for the Cisco IOS DHCP Server
Finding Feature Information
Your software release may not support all the features documented in this module. For the latest caveats and feature information, see Bug Search Tool and the release notes for your platform and software release. To find information about the features documented in this module, and to see a list of the releases in which each feature is supported, see the feature information table.
Use Cisco Feature Navigator to find information about platform support and Cisco software image support. To access Cisco Feature Navigator, go to www.cisco.com/go/cfn. An account on Cisco.com is not required.
Prerequisites for Configuring the DHCP Server
- Before you configure a Cisco Dynamic Host Control Protocol (DHCP) server, you must understand the concepts documented in the “Overview of the DHCP Server” section.
The Cisco DHCP server and the relay agent services are enabled by default. Use the no service dhcp command to disable the Cisco DHCP server and the relay agent and the service dhcp command to reenable the functionality.
Port 67 (the DHCP server port) is closed in the Cisco DHCP/BOOTP default configuration. There are two logical parts to the service dhcp command: service enabled and service running. The DHCP service is enabled by default, but port 67 does not open until the DHCP service is running. If the DHCP service is running, the show ip sockets details or the show sockets detail command displays port 67 as open.
The Cisco DHCP relay agent is enabled on an interface only when you configure the ip helper-address command. This command enables a DHCP broadcast to be forwarded to the configured DHCP server.
Information About the Cisco IOS DHCP Server
Overview of the DHCP Server
The Cisco DHCP server accepts address assignment requests and renewals from the client and assigns the addresses from predefined groups of addresses within DHCP address pools. These address pools can also be configured to supply additional information to the requesting client such as the IP address of the Domain Name System (DNS) server, the default device, and other configuration parameters. The Cisco DHCP server can accept broadcasts from locally attached LAN segments or from DHCP requests that have been forwarded by other DHCP relay agents within the network.
DHCP Attribute Inheritance
The DHCP server database is organized as a tree. The root of the tree is the address pool for natural networks, branches are subnetwork address pools, and leaves are manual bindings to clients. Subnetworks inherit network parameters and clients inherit subnetwork parameters. Therefore, common parameters (for example, the domain name) should be configured at the highest (network or subnetwork) level of the tree.
Inherited parameters can be overridden. For example, if a parameter is defined in both the natural network and a subnetwork, the definition of the subnetwork is used.
Address leases are not inherited. If a lease is not specified for an IP address, by default, the DHCP server assigns a one-day lease for the address.
DHCP Server Address Allocation Using Option 82
The Cisco IOS DHCP server can allocate dynamic IP addresses based on the relay information option (option 82) sent by the relay agent.
DHCP provides a framework for passing configuration information to hosts on a TCP/IP network. Configuration parameters and other control information are carried in tagged data items that are stored in the options field of the DHCP message. The data items are also called options. Option 82 is organized as a single DHCP option that contains information known by the relay agent.
Automatic DHCP address allocation is based on an IP address. This IP address can either be the gateway address (giaddr field of the DHCP packet) or the IP address of an incoming interface. In some networks, it is necessary to use additional information to further determine which IP addresses to allocate. By using option 82, the Cisco IOS DHCP relay agent can include additional information about itself when forwarding client-originated DHCP packets to a DHCP server. The Cisco IOS DHCP server can also use option 82 to provide additional information to properly allocate IP addresses to DHCP clients. The information sent via option 82 is used to identify the port where the DHCP request arrives. Automatic DHCP address allocation does not parse out the individual suboptions contained in option 82. Rather, the address allocation is done by matching a configured pattern byte by byte.
This feature introduces a new DHCP class capability, which is a method to group DHCP clients based on some shared characteristics other than the subnet in which the clients reside.
For example, DHCP clients are connected to two ports of a single switch. Each port can be configured to be a part of two VLANs: VLAN1 and VLAN2. DHCP clients belong to either VLAN1 or VLAN2 and the switch can differentiate the VLAN that a particular DHCP Discover message belongs to (possibly through Layer 2 encapsulation). Each VLAN has its own subnet and all DHCP messages from the same VLAN (same switch) have the giaddr field set to the same value indicating the subnet of the VLAN.
Problems can occur while allocating IP addresses to DHCP clients that are connected to different ports of the same VLAN. These IP addresses must be part of the same subnet but the range of IP addresses must be different. In the preceding example, when a DHCP client that is connected to a port of VLAN1 must be allocated an IP address from a range of IP addresses within the VLAN’s subnet, whereas a DHCP client connecting to port 2 of VLAN1 must be allocated an IP address from another range of IP addresses. The two range of IP addresses are part of the same subnet (and have the same subnet mask). Generally, during DHCP address allocation, the DHCP server refers only to the giaddr field and is unable to differentiate between the two ranges.
To solve this problem, a relay agent residing at the switch inserts the relay information option (option 82), which carries information specific to the port, and the DHCP server inspects both the giaddr field and the inserted option 82 during the address selection process.
- The host (DHCP client) generates a DHCP request and broadcasts it on the network.
- When the device receives the DHCP request, it adds the option 82 information in the packet. The option 82 information contains the device MAC address (the remote ID suboption) and the port identifier, vlan-mod-port, from which the packet is received (the circuit ID suboption).
- The device adds the IP address of the relay agent to the DHCP packet.
- The device forwards the DHCP request that includes the option 82 field to the DHCP server.
- The DHCP server receives the packet. If the server is option 82 capable, it uses the remote ID, the circuit ID, or both to assign IP addresses and implement policies, such as restricting the number of IP addresses that can be assigned to a single remote ID or circuit ID. The DHCP server echoes the option 82 field in the DHCP reply.
- The DHCP server unicasts the reply to the device if the request is relayed to the server by the device. The device verifies that it originally inserted the option 82 data by inspecting remote ID and possibly circuit ID fields. The device removes the option 82 field and forwards the packet to the interface that connects to the DHCP client that sent the DHCP request.
The Cisco software refers to a pool of IP addresses (giaddr or incoming interface IP address) and matches the request to a class or classes configured in the pool in the order the classes are specified in the DHCP pool configuration.
When a DHCP address pool is configured with one or more DHCP classes, the pool becomes a restricted access pool, which means that no addresses are allocated from the pool unless one or more classes in the pool matches. This design allows DHCP classes to be used either for access control (no default class is configured on the pool) or to provide further address range partitions within the subnet of the pool.
Multiple pools can be configured with the same class, eliminating the need to configure the same pattern in multiple pools.
The following capabilities are supported for DHCP class-based address allocation:
Specifying the full relay agent information option value as a raw hexadecimal string by using the relay-information hex command in new relay agent information configuration mode.
Support for bit-masking the raw relay information hexadecimal value.
Support for a wildcard at the end of a hexadecimal string specified by the relay-information hex command.
If the relay agent inserts option 82 but does not set the giaddr field in the DHCP packet, the DHCP server interface must be configured as a trusted interface by using the ip dhcp relay information trusted command. This configuration prevents the server from dropping the DHCP message.
How to Configure the Cisco IOS DHCP Server
- Configuring a DHCP Database Agent or Disabling Conflict Logging
- Excluding IP Addresses
- Configuring DHCP Address Pools
- Configuring Manual Bindings
- Configuring DHCP Static Mapping
- Customizing DHCP Server Operation
- Configuring a Remote Device to Import DHCP Server Options from a Central DHCP Server
- Configuring DHCP Address Allocation Using Option 82
- Configuring a Static Route with the Next-Hop Dynamically Obtained Through DHCP
- Clearing DHCP Server Variables
Configuring a DHCP Database Agent or Disabling Conflict Logging
A DHCP database agent is any host (for example, an FTP, a TFTP, or a remote copy protocol [RCP] server) or storage media on a DHCP server (for example, disk0) that stores the DHCP bindings database. You can configure multiple DHCP database agents, and the interval between database updates and transfers for each agent.
Automatic bindings are IP addresses that are automatically mapped to the MAC addresses of hosts that are found in the DHCP database. Automatic binding information (such as lease expiration date and time, interface index, and VPN routing and forwarding [VRF] name) is stored in a database agent. The bindings are saved as text records for easy maintenance.
An address conflict occurs when two hosts use the same IP address. During address assignment, DHCP checks for conflicts by using ping and gratuitous Address Resolution Protocol (ARP). If a conflict is detected, the address is removed from the pool. The address is not assigned until the administrator resolves the conflict.
Note | We strongly recommend using database agents. However, the Cisco DHCP server can run without database agents. If you choose not to configure a DHCP database agent, disable the recording of DHCP address conflicts on the DHCP server by using the no ip dhcp conflict logging command in global configuration mode. If there is a conflict logging but no database agent is configured, bindings during a switchover are lost when a device reboots. Possible false conflicts can occur causing the address to be removed from the address pool. |
1.
enable
2.
configure
terminal
4.
end
DETAILED STEPS
Excluding IP Addresses
The IP address configured on a device interface is automatically excluded from the DHCP address pool. The DHCP server assumes that all other IP addresses in a DHCP address pool subnet are available for assigning to DHCP clients.
You must exclude addresses from the pool if the DHCP server does not allocate those IP addresses to DHCP clients. Consider a scenario where two DHCP servers are set up for the same network segment (subnet) for redundancy. If DHCP servers do not coordinate their services with each other using a protocol such as DHCP failover, each DHCP server must be configured to allocate addresses from a nonoverlapping set of addresses in the shared subnet. See the Configuring Manual Bindings section for a configuration example.
1.
enable
2.
configure
terminal
3.
ip
dhcp
excluded-address
low-address [high-address]
4.
end
DETAILED STEPS
Configuring DHCP Address Pools
- Configuring a DHCP Address Pool
- Configuring a DHCP Address Pool with Secondary Subnets
- Troubleshooting Tips
- Verifying the DHCP Address Pool Configuration
Configuring a DHCP Address Pool
On a per-address pool basis, specify DHCP options for the client as necessary.
You can configure a DHCP address pool with a name that is a string (such as “engineering”) or an integer (such as 0). Configuring a DHCP address pool also puts the device into DHCP pool configuration mode—identified by the (dhcp-config)# prompt—from which you can configure pool parameters (for example, the IP subnet number and default device list).
DHCP defines a process by which the DHCP server knows the IP subnet in which the DHCP client resides, and it can assign an IP address from a pool of valid IP addresses in that subnet. The process by which the DHCP server identifies the DHCP address pool to use for a client request is described in the Configuring Manual Bindings section.
The DHCP server identifies and uses DHCP address pools for a client request, in the following manner:
If the client is not directly connected to the DHCP server (the giaddr field of the DHCPDISCOVER broadcast message is nonzero), the server matches the DHCPDISCOVER with the DHCP pool that has the subnet that contains the IP address in the giaddr field.
If the client is directly connected to the DHCP server (the giaddr field is zero), the DHCP server matches the DHCPDISCOVER with DHCP pools that contain the subnets configured on the receiving interface. If the interface has secondary IP addresses, subnets associated with the secondary IP addresses are examined for possible allocation only after the subnet associated with the primary IP address (on the interface) is exhausted.
Cisco DHCP server software supports advanced capabilities for IP address allocation. See the Configuring DHCP Address Allocation Using Option 82 section for more information.
Before you configure the DHCP address pool, you must:
Identify DHCP options for devices where necessary, including the following: - Default boot image name
- Default devices
- Domain Name System (DNS) servers
- Network Basic Input/Output System (NetBIOS) name server
- Primary subnet
- Secondary subnets and subnet-specific default device lists (see Configuring a DHCP Address Pool with Secondary Subnets section for information on secondary subnets).
Decide on a NetBIOS node type (b, p, m, or h).
Decide on a DNS domain name.
Note | You cannot configure manual bindings within the same pool that is configured with the network DHCP pool configuration command. To configure manual bindings, see the Configuring Manual Bindings section. |
1.
enable
2.
configure terminal
3.
ip
dhcp
pool name
4.
utilization
mark
high
percentage-number
[log]
5.
utilization
mark
low
percentage-number
[log]
6.
network
network-number
[mask |
/prefix-length] [secondary]
7.
domain-name
domain
8.
dns-server
address [address2
...
address8]
9.
bootfile
filename
10.
next-server
address [address2
...
address8]
11.
netbios-name-server
address [address2
...
address8]
12.
netbios-node-type
type
13.
default-router
address [address2
...
address8]
14.
option
code
[instance
number] {ascii
string |
hex
string |
ip-address}
15.
lease {days [hours [minutes]] |
infinite}
16.
end
DETAILED STEPS
Configuring a DHCP Address Pool with Secondary Subnets
For any DHCP pool, you can configure a primary subnet and any number of secondary subnets. Each subnet is a range of IP addresses that the device uses to allocate an IP address to a DHCP client. The DHCP server multiple subnet functionality enables a Cisco DHCP server address pool to manage additional IP addresses by adding the addresses to a secondary subnet of an existing DHCP address pool (instead of using a separate address pool).
Configuring a secondary DHCP subnetwork places the device in DHCP pool secondary subnet configuration mode—identified by the (config-dhcp-subnet-secondary)# prompt—where you can configure a default address list that is specific to the secondary subnet. You can also specify the utilization rate of the secondary subnet, which allows pools of IP addresses to dynamically increase or reduce in size depending on the address utilization level. This setting overrides the global utilization rate.
If the DHCP server selects an address pool that contains multiple subnets, the DHCP server allocates an IP address from the subnets as follows:
-
When the DHCP server receives an address assignment request, it looks for an available IP address in the primary subnet.
-
When the primary subnet is exhausted, the DHCP server automatically looks for an available IP address in any of the secondary subnets maintained by the DHCP server (even though the giaddr does not necessarily match the secondary subnet). The server inspects the subnets for address availability in the order of subnets that were added to the pool.
-
If the giaddr matches a secondary subnet in the pool, the DHCP server allocates an IP address from that particular secondary subnet (even if IP addresses are available in the primary subnet and irrespective of the order of secondary subnets that were added).
1.
enable
2.
configure
terminal
3.
ip
dhcp
pool
name
4.
utilization
mark
high
percentage-number [log]
5.
utilization
mark
low
percentage-number
[log]
6.
network
network-number [mask |
/prefix-length]
7.
domain-name
domain
8.
dns-server
address
[address2
...
address8]
9.
bootfile
filename
10.
next-server
address [address2
...
address8]
11.
netbios-name-server
address [address2
...
address8]
12.
netbios-node-type
type
13.
default-router
address [address2
...
address8]
14.
option
code
[instance
number]
{ascii
string |
hex
string |
ip-address}
15.
lease {days [hours]
[minutes] |
infinite}
16.
network
network-number [mask |
/prefix-length] [secondary]
17.
override
default-router
address
[address2
...
address8]
18.
override
utilization
high
percentage-number
19.
override
utilization
low
percentage-number
20.
end
DETAILED STEPS
Command or Action | Purpose | |
---|---|---|
Step 1 |
enable
Example: Device> enable |
Enables privileged EXEC mode. |
Step 2 |
configure
terminal
Example: Device# configure terminal |
Enters global configuration mode. |
Step 3 |
ip
dhcp
pool
name
Example: Device(config)# ip dhcp pool 1 |
Creates a name for the DHCP server address pool and enters DHCP pool configuration mode. |
Step 4 |
utilization
mark
high
percentage-number [log]
Example: Device(dhcp-config)# utilization mark high 80 log |
(Optional) Configures the high utilization mark of the current address pool size. |
Step 5 |
utilization
mark
low
percentage-number
[log]
Example: Device(dhcp-config)# utilization mark low 70 log |
(Optional) Configures the low utilization mark of the current address pool size. |
Step 6 |
network
network-number [mask |
/prefix-length]
Example: Device(dhcp-config)# network 172.16.0.0 /16 |
Specifies the subnet network number and mask of the primary DHCP address pool. |
Step 7 |
domain-name
domain
Example: Device(dhcp-config)# domain-name cisco.com |
Specifies the domain name for the client. |
Step 8 |
dns-server
address
[address2
...
address8]
Example: Device(dhcp-config)# dns server 172.16.1.103 172.16.2.103 |
Specifies the IP address of a DNS server that is available to a DHCP client. |
Step 9 |
bootfile
filename
Example: Device(dhcp-config)# bootfile xllboot |
(Optional) Specifies the name of the default boot image for a DHCP client. |
Step 10 |
next-server
address [address2
...
address8]
Example: Device(dhcp-config)# next-server 172.17.1.103 172.17.2.103 |
(Optional) Configures the next server in the boot process of a DHCP client.
|
Step 11 |
netbios-name-server
address [address2
...
address8]
Example: Device(dhcp-config)# netbios-name-server 172.16.1.103 172.16.2.103 |
(Optional) Specifies the NetBIOS Windows Internet Naming Service (WINS) server that is available to a Microsoft DHCP client. |
Step 12 |
netbios-node-type
type
Example: Device(dhcp-config)# netbios-node-type h-node |
(Optional) Specifies the NetBIOS node type for a Microsoft DHCP client. |
Step 13 |
default-router
address [address2
...
address8]
Example: Device(dhcp-config)# default-router 172.16.1.100 172.16.1.101 |
(Optional) Specifies the IP address of the default device for a DHCP client.
|
Step 14 |
option
code
[instance
number]
{ascii
string |
hex
string |
ip-address}
Example: Device(dhcp-config)# option 19 hex 01 |
(Optional) Configures DHCP server options. |
Step 15 |
lease {days [hours]
[minutes] |
infinite}
Example: Device(dhcp-config)# lease 30 |
(Optional) Specifies the duration of the lease. |
Step 16 |
network
network-number [mask |
/prefix-length] [secondary]
Example: Device(dhcp-config)# network 10.10.0.0 255.255.0.0 secondary |
(Optional) Specifies the network number and mask of a secondary DHCP server address pool.
|
Step 17 |
override
default-router
address
[address2
...
address8]
Example: Device(config-dhcp-subnet-secondary)# override default-router 10.10.0.100 10.10.0.101 |
(Optional) Specifies the default device list that is used when an IP address is assigned to a DHCP client from a particular secondary subnet.
|
Step 18 |
override
utilization
high
percentage-number
Example: Device(config-dhcp-subnet-secondary)# override utilization high 60 |
(Optional) Sets the high utilization mark of the subnet size. |
Step 19 |
override
utilization
low
percentage-number
Example: Device(config-dhcp-subnet-secondary)# override utilization low 40 |
(Optional) Sets the low utilization mark of the subnet size. |
Step 20 |
end
Example: Device(config-dhcp-subnet-secondary)# end |
Returns to privileged EXEC mode. |
Troubleshooting Tips
If you are using secondary IP addresses under a single loopback interface and using secondary subnets under a DHCP pool, use one DHCP pool to configure networks for all the secondary subnets instead of using one pool per secondary subnet. The network network-number [mask | /prefix-length] [secondary] command must be configured under a single DHCP address pool rather than multiple DHCP address pools.
The following is the correct configuration:
! ip dhcp pool dhcp_1 network 172.16.1.0 255.255.255.0 network 172.16.2.0 255.255.255.0 secondary network 172.16.3.0 255.255.255.0 secondary network 172.16.4.0 255.255.255.0 secondary ! interface Loopback111 ip address 172.16.1.1 255.255.255.255 secondary ip address 172.16.2.1 255.255.255.255 secondary ip address 172.16.3.1 255.255.255.255 secondary ip address 172.16.4.1 255.255.255.255 secondary
The following is the incorrect configuration:
! ip dhcp pool dhcp_1 network 172.16.1.0 255.255.255.0 lease 1 20 30 accounting default ! ip dhcp pool dhcp_2 network 172.16.2.0 255.255.255.0 lease 1 20 30 accounting default ! ip dhcp pool dhcp_3 network 172.16.3.0 255.255.255.0 lease 1 20 30 accounting default ! ip dhcp pool dhcp_4 network 172.16.4.0 255.255.255.0 lease 1 20 30 accounting default ! interface Loopback111 ip address 172.16.1.1 255.255.255.255 secondary ip address 172.16.2.1 255.255.255.255 secondary ip address 172.16.3.1 255.255.255.255 secondary ip address 172.16.4.1 255.255.255.255 secondary
Verifying the DHCP Address Pool Configuration
The following configuration commands are optional. You can enter the show commands in any order.
1.
enable
2.
show
ip
dhcp
pool
[name]
3.
show
ip
dhcp
binding
[address]
4.
show
ip
dhcp
conflict
[address]
5.
show
ip
dhcp
database
[url]
6.
show
ip
dhcp
server
statistics
[type-number]
DETAILED STEPS
Configuring Manual Bindings
An address binding is a mapping between the IP address and MAC address of a client. The IP address of a client can be assigned manually by an administrator or assigned automatically from a pool by a DHCP server.
Manual bindings are IP addresses that are manually mapped to MAC addresses of hosts that are found in the DHCP database. Manual bindings are stored in the NVRAM of the DHCP server. Manual bindings are just special address pools. There is no limit to the number of manual bindings, but you can configure only one manual binding per host pool.
Automatic bindings are IP addresses that have been automatically mapped to MAC addresses of hosts that are found in the DHCP database. Because the bindings are stored in the volatile memory of the DHCP server, binding information is lost in the event of power failures or on device reloads. To prevent the loss of automatic binding information, a copy of the automatic binding information is stored on a remote host called the DHCP database agent. The bindings are periodically written to the database agent. When the device reloads, the bindings are read from the database agent to the DHCP database in the DHCP server.
Note | We strongly recommend that you use database agents. However, Cisco DHCP server can function even without database agents. |
Some DHCP clients send a client identifier (DHCP option 61) in the DHCP packet. To configure manual bindings for such clients, you must enter the client-identifier command with the hexadecimal values that identify the DHCP client. To configure manual bindings for clients that do not send a client identifier option, you must enter the hardware-address DHCP pool configuration command with the hexadecimal hardware address of the client.
Depending on your release, the DHCP server sends infinite lease time to the clients for which manual bindings are configured.
Depending on your release, the DHCP server sends lease time that is configured using the lease command to clients for which manual bindings are configured.
Note | You cannot configure manual bindings within the same pool that is configured with the network command in DHCP pool configuration mode. See the Configuring DHCP Address Pools section for information about DHCP address pools and the network command. |
1.
enable
2.
configure
terminal
3.
ip
dhcp
pool
pool-name
4.
host
address
[mask |
/prefix-length]
5.
client-identifier
unique-identifier
6.
hardware-address
hardware-address
[protocol-type |
hardware-number]
7.
client-name
name
8.
end
DETAILED STEPS
Troubleshooting Tips
You can determine the client identifier by using the debug ip dhcp server packet command. In the following sample output, the client is identified by the value 0b07.1134.a029:
Device# debug ip dhcp server packet DHCPD:DHCPDISCOVER received from client 0b07.1134.a029 through relay 10.1.0.253. DHCPD:assigned IP address 10.1.0.3 to client 0b07.1134.a029. . . .
Configuring DHCP Static Mapping
The DHCP Static Mapping feature enables the assignment of static IP addresses (without creating numerous host pools with manual bindings) by using a customer-created text file that the DHCP server reads. The benefit of this feature is that it eliminates the need for a long configuration file and reduces the space required in NVRAM to maintain address pools.
A DHCP database contains the mappings between a client IP address and the hardware address, which is referred to as a binding. There are two types of bindings: manual bindings that map a single hardware address to a single IP address, and automatic bindings that dynamically map a hardware address to an IP address from a pool of IP addresses. Manual (also known as static) bindings can be configured individually directly on the device or by using the DHCP Static Mapping feature. These static bindings can be read from a separate static mapping text file. The static mapping text files are read when a device reloads or the DHCP service restarts. These files are read-only.
The read static bindings are treated just like the manual bindings, in that they are:
Retained across DHCPRELEASEs from the clients.
Not timed out.
Deleted only upon deletion of the pool.
Provided appropriate exclusions for the contained addresses, which are created at the time of the read.
Just like automatic bindings, manual (or static) bindings from the static mapping text file are also displayed by using the show ip dhcp binding command.
Perform this task to create the static mapping text file. You will input your addresses in the text file, which is stored in the DHCP database for the DHCP server to read. There is no limit to the number of addresses that can be stored in the file. The file format has the following elements:
Database version number
End-of-file designator
Hardware type
Hardware address
IP address
Lease expiration
Time the file was created
See the following table for more details about the format of the text file.
The following is a sample static mapping text file:
*time* Jan 21 2005 03:52 PM *version* 2 !IP address Type Hardware address Lease expiration 10.0.0.4 /24 1 0090.bff6.081e Infinite 10.0.0.5 /28 id 00b7.0813.88f1.66 Infinite 10.0.0.2 /21 1 0090.bff6.081d Infinite *end*
Field |
Description |
---|---|
*time* |
Specifies the time the file was created. This field allows DHCP to differentiate between the new and old database versions when multiple agents are configured. The valid format of the time is mm dd yyyy hh:mm AM/PM. |
*version* 2 |
Specifies the database version number. |
IP address |
Specifies the static IP address. If the subnet mask is not specified, a mask is automatically assigned depending on the IP address. The IP address and the mask is separated by a space. |
Type |
Specifies the hardware type. For example, type “1” indicates Ethernet. The type “id” indicates that the field is a DHCP client identifier. Legal values can be found online at http://www.iana.org/assignments/arp-parameters in the “Number Hardware Type” list. |
Hardware address |
Specifies the hardware address. When the type is numeric, the type refers to the hardware media. Legal values can be found online at http://www.iana.org/assignments/arp-parameters in the “Number Hardware Type” list. When the type is “id,” the type refers to a match on the client identifier. For more information about the client identifier, see RFC 2132, DHCP Options and BOOTP Vendor Extensions, section 9.14, located at http://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc2132.txt, or the client-identifier command. If you are unsure about the client identifier to match with the hardware type, use the debug dhcp detail command to display the client identifier being sent to the DHCP server from the client. |
Lease expiration |
Specifies the expiration of the lease. “Infinite” specifies that the duration of the lease is unlimited. |
*end* |
End of file. DHCP uses the *end* designator to detect file truncation. |
Configuring the DHCP Server to Read a Static Mapping Text File
The administrator must create the static mapping text file in the correct format and configure the address pools before performing this task.
Before editing the file, you must disable the DHCP server using the no service dhcp command.
Note | The static bindings must not be deleted when a DHCPRELEASE is received or must not be timed out by the DHCP timer. The static bindings should be created by using the ip dhcp pool command. |
1.
enable
2.
configure
terminal
3.
ip
dhcp
pool name
4.
origin
file
url
5.
end
6.
show
ip
dhcp
binding
[address]
DETAILED STEPS
Command or Action | Purpose | |||
---|---|---|---|---|
Step 1 |
enable
Example: Device> enable |
Enables privileged EXEC mode. | ||
Step 2 |
configure
terminal
Example: Device# configure terminal |
Enters global configuration mode. | ||
Step 3 |
ip
dhcp
pool name
Example: Device(config)# ip dhcp pool pool1 |
Assigns a name to a DHCP pool and enters DHCP configuration mode.
| ||
Step 4 |
origin
file
url
Example: Device(dhcp-config)# origin file tftp://10.1.0.1/static-bindings |
Specifies the URL that the DHCP server can access to locate the text file. | ||
Step 5 |
end
Example: Device(dhcp-config)# end |
Returns to privileged EXEC mode. | ||
Step 6 |
show
ip
dhcp
binding
[address]
Example: Device# show ip dhcp binding |
(Optional) Displays a list of all bindings created on a specific DHCP server. |
Examples
The following sample output from the show ip dhcp binding command displays address bindings that are configured:
Device# show ip dhcp binding 00:05:14:%SYS-5-CONFIG_I: Configured from console by console Bindings from all pools not associated with VRF: IP address Client-ID/ Ls expir Type Hw address User name 10.9.9.4/8 0063.7363.2d30.3036. Infinite Static 302e.3762.2e39.3634. 632d.4574.8892. 10.9.9.1/24 0063.6973.636f.2d30. Infinite Static 3036.302e.3437.3165. 2e64.6462.342d.
The following sample output displays each entry in the static mapping text file:
*time* Jan 21 2005 22:52 PM !IP address Type Hardware address Lease expiration 10.19.9.1 /24 id 0063.6973.636f.2d30.3036.302e.3437 10.9.9.4 id 0063.7363.2d30.3036.302e.3762.2e39.3634.632d Infinite *end*
Device# debug ip dhcp server Loading abc/static_pool from 10.19.192.33 (via Ethernet0): [OK - 333 bytes] *May 26 23:14:21.259: DHCPD: contacting agent tftp://10.19.192.33/abc/static_pool (attempt 0) *May 26 23:14:21.467: DHCPD: agent tftp://10.19.192.33/abc/static_pool is responding. *May 26 23:14:21.467: DHCPD: IFS is ready. *May 26 23:14:21.467: DHCPD: reading bindings from tftp://10.19.192.33/abc/static_pool. *May 26 23:14:21.707: DHCPD: read 333 / 1024 bytes. *May 26 23:14:21.707: DHCPD: parsing text line *time* Apr 22 2002 11:31 AM *May 26 23:14:21.707: DHCPD: parsing text line ““ *May 26 23:14:21.707: DHCPD: parsing text line !IP address Type Hardware address Lease expiration *May 26 23:14:21.707: DHCPD: parsing text line “10.9.9.1 /24 id 0063.6973.636f.2d30.3036.302e.3437” *May 26 23:14:21.707: DHCPD: creating binding for 10.9.9.1 *May 26 23:14:21.707: DHCPD: Adding binding to radix tree (10.9.9.1) *May 26 23:14:21.707: DHCPD: Adding binding to hash tree *May 26 23:14:21.707: DHCPD: parsing text line “10.9.9.4 id 0063.7363.2d30.3036.302e.3762.2e39.3634.632d” *May 26 23:14:21.711: DHCPD: creating binding for 10.9.9.4 *May 26 23:14:21.711: DHCPD: Adding binding to radix tree (10.9.9.4) *May 26 23:14:21.711: DHCPD: Adding binding to hash tree *May 26 23:14:21.711: DHCPD: parsing text line “Infinite” *May 26 23:14:21.711: DHCPD: parsing text line “” *May 26 23:14:21.711: DHCPD: parsing text line !IP address Interface-index Lease expiration VRF *May 26 23:14:21.711: DHCPD: parsing text line “*end*” *May 26 23:14:21.711: DHCPD: read static bindings from tftp://10.19.192.33/abcemp/static_pool.
Customizing DHCP Server Operation
By default, the DHCP server pings a pool address twice before assigning a particular address to a requesting client. If the ping is unanswered, the DHCP server assumes (with a high probability) that the address is not in use and assigns the address to the requesting client.
By default, the DHCP server waits for 2 seconds before timing out a ping packet.
You can configure the DHCP server to ignore and not reply to any BOOTP requests that the server receives. This functionality is beneficial when there is a mix of BOOTP and DHCP clients in a network segment and there is a BOOTP server and a Cisco DHCP server servicing the network segment. The BOOTP server is configured with static bindings for the BOOTP clients and the BOOTP clients must obtain their addresses from the BOOTP server. However, DHCP servers can also respond to BOOTP requests and the DHCP server may offer an address that causes the BOOTP clients to boot with the address from the DHCP server, instead of the address from the BOOTP server. Configuring the DHCP server to ignore BOOTP requests ensures that the BOOTP clients will receive address information from the BOOTP server and will not accept an address from a DHCP server.
Cisco software can forward these ignored BOOTP request packets to another DHCP server if the ip helper-address command is configured on the incoming interface.
Note | It is not recommended to use DHCP ping checks on Cisco Catalyst switches implemented in switch stack or VSS. |
1.
enable
2.
configure
terminal
3.
ip
dhcp
ping
packets
number
4.
ip
dhcp
ping
timeout
milliseconds
5.
ip
dhcp
bootp
ignore
6.
end
DETAILED STEPS
Command or Action | Purpose | |
---|---|---|
Step 1 |
enable
Example: Device> enable |
Enables privileged EXEC mode. |
Step 2 |
configure
terminal
Example: Device# configure terminal |
Enters global configuration mode. |
Step 3 |
ip
dhcp
ping
packets
number
Example: Device(config)# ip dhcp ping packets 5 |
(Optional) Specifies the number of ping packets the DHCP server sends to a pool address before assigning the address to a requesting client. |
Step 4 |
ip
dhcp
ping
timeout
milliseconds
Example: Device(config)# ip dhcp ping timeout 850 |
(Optional) Specifies the duration the DHCP server waits for a ping reply from an address pool. |
Step 5 |
ip
dhcp
bootp
ignore
Example: Device(config)# ip dhcp bootp ignore |
(Optional) Allows the DHCP server to selectively ignore and not reply to received BOOTP requests. |
Step 6 |
end
Example: Device(config)# end |
Returns to privileged EXEC mode. |
Configuring a Remote Device to Import DHCP Server Options from a Central DHCP Server
The Cisco DHCP server can dynamically configure options such as the Domain Name System (DNS) and Windows Internet Name Service (WINS) addresses to respond to DHCP requests from local clients behind the customer premises equipment (CPE). Earlier, network administrators configured the Cisco DHCP server on each device manually. Now, the Cisco DHCP server is enhanced to allow configuration information to be updated automatically. Network administrators can configure one or more centralized DHCP servers to update specific DHCP options within the DHCP pools. The remote servers can request or “import” these option parameters from centralized servers.
This section contains the following tasks:
- Configuring the Central DHCP Server to Update DHCP Options
- Configuring the Remote Device to Import DHCP Options
Configuring the Central DHCP Server to Update DHCP Options
Perform the following task to configure the Central DHCP Server to update DHCP options:
1.
enable
2.
configure
terminal
3.
ip
dhcp
pool
name
4.
network
network-number [mask |
/prefix-length]
5.
dns-server
address
[address2
...
address8]
6.
end
DETAILED STEPS
Command or Action | Purpose | |
---|---|---|
Step 1 |
enable
Example: Device> enable |
Enables privileged EXEC mode. |
Step 2 |
configure
terminal
Example: Device# configure terminal |
Enters global configuration mode. |
Step 3 |
ip
dhcp
pool
name
Example: Device(config)# ip dhcp pool 1 |
Creates a name for the DHCP server address pool and enters DHCP pool configuration mode. |
Step 4 |
network
network-number [mask |
/prefix-length]
Example: Device(dhcp-config)# network 172.16.0.0 /16 |
Specifies the subnet number and mask of the DHCP address pool. |
Step 5 |
dns-server
address
[address2
...
address8]
Example: Device(dhcp-config)# dns server 172.16.1.103 172.16.2.103 |
(Optional) Specifies the IP address of a DNS server that is available to a DHCP client. |
Step 6 |
end
Example: Device(dhcp-config)# end |
Returns to privileged EXEC mode. |
Configuring the Remote Device to Import DHCP Options
Perform the following task to configure the remote device to import DHCP options:
Note | When two servers provide DHCP addresses to a single device configured with ip address dhcp on two different interfaces, the imported information is merged and, for those options that take a single value, the last known option value will be used. |
1.
enable
2.
configure
terminal
3.
ip
dhcp
pool
pool-name
4.
network
network-number [mask |
/prefix-length]
5.
import
all
6.
exit
7.
interface
type
number
8.
ip
address
dhcp
9.
end
10.
show
ip
dhcp
import
DETAILED STEPS
Command or Action | Purpose | |
---|---|---|
Step 1 |
enable
Example: Device> enable |
Enables privileged EXEC mode. |
Step 2 |
configure
terminal
Example: Device# configure terminal |
Enters global configuration mode. |
Step 3 |
ip
dhcp
pool
pool-name
Example: Device(config)# ip dhcp pool pool1 |
Creates a name for the DHCP server address pool and enters DHCP pool configuration mode. |
Step 4 |
network
network-number [mask |
/prefix-length]
Example: Device(dhcp-config)# network 172.30.0.0 /16 |
Specifies the subnet network number and mask of the DHCP address pool. |
Step 5 |
import
all
Example: Device(dhcp-config)# import all |
Imports DHCP option parameters into the DHCP server database. |
Step 6 |
exit
Example: Device(dhcp-config)# exit |
Exits DHCP pool configuration mode and enters global configuration mode. |
Step 7 |
interface
type
number
Example: Device(config)# interface FastEthernet 0/0 |
Configures an interface and enters interface configuration mode. |
Step 8 |
ip
address
dhcp
Example: Device(config-if)# ip address dhcp |
Specifies that the interface acquires an IP address through DHCP. |
Step 9 |
end
Example: Device(config-if)# end |
Returns to privileged EXEC mode. |
Step 10 |
show
ip
dhcp
import
Example: Device# show ip dhcp import |
Displays the options that are imported from the central DHCP server. |
Configuring DHCP Address Allocation Using Option 82
- Enabling Option 82 for DHCP Address Allocation
- Troubleshooting Tips
- Defining the DHCP Class and Relay Agent Information Patterns
- Troubleshooting Tips
- Defining the DHCP Address Pool
Enabling Option 82 for DHCP Address Allocation
By default, the Cisco DHCP server uses information provided by option 82 to allocate IP addresses. If the DHCP address allocation is disabled, perform the task described in this section to reenable this capability.
1.
enable
2.
configure
terminal
3.
ip
dhcp
use
class
4.
end
DETAILED STEPS
Command or Action | Purpose | |
---|---|---|
Step 1 |
enable
Example: Device> enable |
Enables privileged EXEC mode. |
Step 2 |
configure
terminal
Example: Device# configure terminal |
Enters global configuration mode. |
Step 3 |
ip
dhcp
use
class
Example: Device(config)# ip dhcp use class |
Controls DHCP classes that are used for address allocation. |
Step 4 |
end
Example: Device(config)# end |
Returns to privileged EXEC mode. |
Troubleshooting Tips
If DHCP classes are configured in the pool, but the DHCP server does not use the classes, verify if the no ip dhcp use class command was configured.
Defining the DHCP Class and Relay Agent Information Patterns
You must know the hexadecimal value of each byte location in option 82 to configure the relay-information hex command. The option 82 format may vary from product to product. Contact the relay agent vendor for this information.
Perform this task to define the DHCP class and relay agent information patterns:
1.
enable
2.
configure
terminal
3.
ip
dhcp
class
class-name
4.
relay
agent
information
5.
relay-information
hex
pattern [*] [bitmask
mask]
6. Repeat Steps 3 through 5 for each DHCP class you need to configure.
7.
end
DETAILED STEPS
Command or Action | Purpose | |
---|---|---|
Step 1 |
enable
Example: Device> enable |
Enables privileged EXEC mode. |
Step 2 |
configure
terminal
Example: Device# configure terminal |
Enters global configuration mode. |
Step 3 |
ip
dhcp
class
class-name
Example: Device(config)# ip dhcp class CLASS1 |
Defines a DHCP class and enters DHCP class configuration mode. |
Step 4 |
relay
agent
information
Example: Device(dhcp-class)# relay agent information |
Enters relay agent information option configuration mode. |
Step 5 |
relay-information
hex
pattern [*] [bitmask
mask]
Example: Device(dhcp-class-relayinfo)# relay-information hex 01030a0b0c02050000000123 |
(Optional) Specifies a hexadecimal value for full relay information option.
|
Step 6 | Repeat Steps 3 through 5 for each DHCP class you need to configure. | |
Step 7 |
end
Example: Device(dhcp-class-relayinfo)# end |
Returns to privileged EXEC mode. |
Troubleshooting Tips
Use the debug ip dhcp server class command to display the class matching results.
Defining the DHCP Address Pool
Perform this task to define the DHCP address pool:
1.
enable
2.
configure
terminal
3.
ip
dhcp
pool
name
4.
network
network-number [mask |
/prefix-length]
5.
class
class-name
6.
address
range
start-ip
end-ip
7. Repeat Steps 5 and 6 for each DHCP class you need to associate with the DHCP pool.
8.
end
DETAILED STEPS
Command or Action | Purpose | |
---|---|---|
Step 1 |
enable
Example: Device> enable |
Enables privileged EXEC mode. |
Step 2 |
configure
terminal
Example: Device# configure terminal |
Enters global configuration mode. |
Step 3 |
ip
dhcp
pool
name
Example: Device# ip dhcp pool ABC |
Configures a DHCP address pool on a Cisco IOS DHCP server and enters DHCP pool configuration mode. |
Step 4 |
network
network-number [mask |
/prefix-length]
Example: Device(dhcp-config)# network 10.0.20.0 |
Configures the subnet and mask for a DHCP address pool on a Cisco IOS DHCP server. |
Step 5 |
class
class-name
Example: Device(dhcp-config)# class CLASS1 |
Associates a class with a pool and enters DHCP pool class configuration mode. |
Step 6 |
address
range
start-ip
end-ip
Example: Device(dhcp-pool-class)# address range 10.0.20.1 10.0.20.100 |
(Optional) Sets an address range for the DHCP class in a DHCP server address pool. |
Step 7 | Repeat Steps 5 and 6 for each DHCP class you need to associate with the DHCP pool. | |
Step 8 |
end
Example: Device(dhcp-pool-class)# end |
Returns to privileged EXEC mode. |
Configuring a Static Route with the Next-Hop Dynamically Obtained Through DHCP
This task enables static routes to be assigned using a DHCP default gateway as the next-hop device. This behavior was not possible before the introduction of this feature because the gateway IP address is not known until after the DHCP address assignment. You cannot configure a static route with the CLI without knowing that DHCP-supplied address.
The static routes are updated in the routing table when the default gateway is assigned by the DHCP server. The routes remain in the routing table until the DHCP lease expires and then the routes are removed.
When a DHCP client releases an address, the corresponding static route (the route configured using the ip route command) is automatically removed from the routing table. If the DHCP router option (option 3 of the DHCP packet) changes during the client renewal, the DHCP default gateway changes to the new IP address supplied after the renewal.
This feature is particularly useful for VPN deployments such as Dynamic Multipoint VPNs (DMVPNs). This feature is useful when a nonphysical interface, such as a multipoint generic routing encapsulation (mGRE) tunnel, is configured on a device and certain traffic must be excluded from entering the tunnel interface.
Verify all DHCP client and server configuration steps. Ensure that the DHCP client and server are properly defined to supply a DHCP device option 3 of the DHCP packet.
Note |
|
1.
enable
2.
configure
terminal
3.
ip
route
prefix
mask
{ip-address |
interface-type
interface-number [ip-address]}
dhcp [distance]
4.
end
5.
show
ip
route
DETAILED STEPS
Command or Action | Purpose | |
---|---|---|
Step 1 |
enable
Example: Device> enable |
Enables privileged EXEC mode. |
Step 2 |
configure
terminal
Example: Device# configure terminal |
Enters global configuration mode. |
Step 3 |
ip
route
prefix
mask
{ip-address |
interface-type
interface-number [ip-address]}
dhcp [distance]
Example: Device(config)# ip route 192.168.1.1 255.255.255.255 192.168.2.2 dhcp |
Assigns a static route for the default next-hop device when the DHCP server is accessed for an IP address.
|
Step 4 |
end
Example: Device(config)# end |
Returns to privileged EXEC mode. |
Step 5 |
show
ip
route
Example: Device# show ip route |
(Optional) Displays the current state of the routing table. |
Clearing DHCP Server Variables
Perform this task to clear DHCP server variables:
1.
enable
2.
clear
ip
dhcp
binding {address |
*}
3.
clear
ip
dhcp
conflict {address |
*}
4.
clear
ip
dhcp
server
statistics
DETAILED STEPS
Command or Action | Purpose | |
---|---|---|
Step 1 |
enable
Example: Device> enable |
Enables privileged EXEC mode. |
Step 2 |
clear
ip
dhcp
binding {address |
*}
Example: Device# clear ip dhcp binding * |
Deletes an automatic address binding from the DHCP database. |
Step 3 |
clear
ip
dhcp
conflict {address |
*}
Example: Device# clear ip dhcp conflict 172.16.1.103 |
Clears an address conflict from the DHCP database. |
Step 4 |
clear
ip
dhcp
server
statistics
Example: Device# clear ip dhcp server statistics |
Resets all DHCP server counters to 0. |
Configuration Examples for the Cisco IOS DHCP Server
- Example: Configuring the DHCP Database Agent
- Example: Excluding IP Addresses
- Example: Configuring DHCP Address Pools
- Example: Configuring a DHCP Address Pool with Multiple Disjoint Subnets
- Example: Configuring Manual Bindings
- Example: Configuring Static Mapping
- Example: Configuring the Option to Ignore all BOOTP Requests
- Example: Importing DHCP Options
- Example: Configuring DHCP Address Allocation Using Option 82
- Example: Configuring a Static Route with the Next-Hop Dynamically Obtained Through DHCP
Example: Configuring the DHCP Database Agent
The following example shows how to store bindings on host 172.16.4.253. The file transfer protocol is FTP. The server waits for 2 minutes (120 seconds) before performing database changes.
ip dhcp database ftp://user:password@172.16.4.253/router-dhcp write-delay 120
Example: Excluding IP Addresses
In the following example, server A and server B service the subnet 10.0.20.0/24. If the subnet is split equally between the two servers, server A is configured to allocate IP addresses 10.0.20.1 to 10.0.20.125 and server B is configured to allocate IP addresses 10.0.20.126 to 10.0.20.254.
Server A
ip dhcp excluded-address 10.0.20.126 10.0.20.255 ! ip dhcp pool A network 10.0.20.0 255.255.255.0
Server B
ip dhcp excluded-address 10.0.20.0 10.0.20.125 ! ip dhcp pool B network 10.0.20.0 255.255.255.0
Example: Configuring DHCP Address Pools
In the following example, three DHCP address pools are created: one in network 172.16.0.0, one in subnetwork 172.16.1.0, and one in subnetwork 172.16.2.0. Attributes from network 172.16.0.0—such as the domain name, Domain Name System (DNS) server, (Network Basic Input/Output System) NetBIOS name server, and NetBIOS node type—are inherited in subnetworks 172.16.1.0 and 172.16.2.0. In each pool, clients are granted 30-day leases and all addresses in each subnetwork, except the excluded addresses, are available to the DHCP server for assigning to clients. The table below lists the IP addresses for the devices in three DHCP address pools.
Pool 0 (Network 172.16.0.0) |
Pool 1 (Subnetwork 172.16.1.0) |
Pool 2 (Subnetwork 172.16.2.0) |
|||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Device |
IP Address |
Device |
IP Address |
Device |
IP Address |
Default devices |
— |
Default devices |
172.16.1.100 172.16.1.101 |
Default devices |
172.16.2.100 172.16.2.101 |
DNS server |
172.16.1.102 172.16.2.102 |
— |
— |
— |
— |
NetBIOS name server |
172.16.1.103 172.16.2.103 |
— |
— |
— |
— |
NetBIOS node type |
h-node |
— |
— |
— |
— |
ip dhcp database ftp://user:password@172.16.4.253/router-dhcp write-delay 120 ip dhcp excluded-address 172.16.1.100 172.16.1.103 ip dhcp excluded-address 172.16.2.100 172.16.2.103 ! ip dhcp pool 0 network 172.16.0.0 /16 domain-name cisco.com dns-server 172.16.1.102 172.16.2.102 netbios-name-server 172.16.1.103 172.16.2.103 netbios-node-type h-node ! ip dhcp pool 1 network 172.16.1.0 /24 default-router 172.16.1.100 172.16.1.101 lease 30 ! ip dhcp pool 2 network 172.16.2.0 /24 default-router 172.16.2.100 172.16.2.101 lease 30
Example: Configuring a DHCP Address Pool with Multiple Disjoint Subnets
Multiple disjoint subnets in a DHCP pool can be used in any of the following network topologies:
IP address pooling—The DHCP client and server reside on the same subnet.
DHCP relay—The DHCP client and DHCP server communicate through a DHCP relay agent where the relay interface is configured with secondary IP addresses.
Hierarchical DHCP—The DHCP server is configured as the DHCP subnet allocation server. The DHCP client and DHCP subnet allocation server communicate through an on-demand address pool (ODAP) router.
In the following example, one DHCP address pool named pool3 is created; the primary subnet is 172.16.0.0/16, one secondary subnet is 172.16.1.0/24, and the other secondary subnet is 172.16.2.0/24.
When IP addresses in the primary subnet are exhausted, the DHCP server inspects the secondary subnets in the order in which the subnets were added to the pool.
When the DHCP server allocates an IP address from the secondary subnet 172.16.1.0/24, the server uses the subnet-specific default device list that consists of IP addresses 172.16.1.100 and 172.16.1.101. However, when the DHCP server allocates an IP address from the subnet 172.16.2.0/24, the server uses the pool-wide list that consists of the four IP addresses from 172.16.0.100 to 172.16.0.103.
Other attributes from the primary subnet 172.16.0.0/16—such as the domain name, DNS server, NetBIOS name server, and NetBIOS node type—are inherited in both the secondary subnets.
DHCP clients are granted 30-day leases on IP addresses in the pool. All addresses in each subnet, except the excluded addresses, are available to the DHCP server for assigning to clients.
The table below lists the IP addresses for the devices in the DHCP address pool that consists of three disjoint subnets.
Primary Subnet (172.16.0.0/16) |
First Secondary Subnet (172.16.1.0/24) |
Second Secondary Subnet (172.16.2.0/24) |
|||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Device |
IP Address |
Device |
IP Address |
Device |
IP Address |
Default devices |
172.16.0.100 172.16.0.101 172.16.0.102 172.16.0.103 |
Default devices |
172.16.1.100 172.16.1.101 |
Default devices |
172.16.0.100 172.16.0.101 172.16.0.102 172.16.0.103 |
DNS server |
172.16.1.102 172.16.2.102 |
— |
— |
— |
— |
NetBIOS name server |
172.16.1.103 172.16.2.103 |
— |
— |
— |
— |
NetBIOS node type |
h-node |
— |
— |
— |
— |
ip dhcp database ftp://user:password@172.16.4.253/router-dhcp write-delay 120 ip dhcp excluded-address 172.16.0.100 172.16.1.103 ip dhcp excluded-address 172.16.1.100 172.16.1.101 ! ip dhcp pool pool3 network 172.16.0.0 /16 default-router 172.16.0.100 172.16.2.101 172.16.0.102 172.16.0.103 domain-name cisco.com dns-server 172.16.1.102 172.16.2.102 netbios-name-server 172.16.1.103 172.16.2.103 netbios-node-type h-node lease 30 ! network 172.16.1.0 /24 secondary override default-router 172.16.1.100 172.16.1.101 end ! network 172.16.2.0 /24 secondary
Example: Configuring Manual Bindings
The following example shows how to create a manual binding for a client named example1.abc.com that sends a client identifier in the DHCP packet. The MAC address of the client is 02c7.f800.0422 and the IP address of the client is 172.16.2.254.
ip dhcp pool pool1 host 172.16.2.254 client-identifier 01b7.0813.8811.66 client-name example1
The following example shows how to create a manual binding for a client named example2.abc.com that does not send a client identifier in the DHCP packet. The MAC address of the client is 02c7.f800.0422 and the IP address of the client is 172.16.2.253.
ip dhcp pool pool2 host 172.16.2.253 hardware-address 02c7.f800.0422 ethernet client-name example1
Because attributes are inherited, the two preceding configurations are equivalent to the following:
ip dhcp pool pool1 host 172.16.2.254 255.255.255.0 hardware-address 02c7.f800.0422 ieee802 client-name client1 default-router 172.16.2.100 172.16.2.101 domain-name abc.com dns-server 172.16.1.102 172.16.2.102 netbios-name-server 172.16.1.103 172.16.2.103 netbios-node-type h-node
Example: Configuring Static Mapping
The following example shows how to restart the DHCP server, configure the pool, and specify the URL where the static mapping text file is stored:
no service dhcp service dhcp ip dhcp pool abcpool origin file tftp://10.1.0.1/staticfilename
Note | The static mapping text file can be copied to flash memory on the device and served by the TFTP process of the device. In this case, the IP address in the original file line must be an address owned by the device and one additional line of configuration is required on the device:tftp-server flash static-filename. |
Example: Configuring the Option to Ignore all BOOTP Requests
The following example shows two DHCP pools that are configured on the device and that the device’s DHCP server is configured to ignore all received BOOTP requests. If a BOOTP request is received from subnet 10.0.18.0/24, the request will be dropped by the device (because the ip helper-address command is not configured). If there is a BOOTP request from subnet 192.168.1.0/24, the request will be forwarded to 172.16.1.1 via the ip helper-address command.
version 12.2 service timestamps debug uptime service timestamps log uptime no service password-encryption ! hostname Router ! ip subnet-zero ! ip dhcp bootp ignore ! ip dhcp pool ABC network 192.168.1.0 255.255.255.0 default-router 192.168.1.3 lease 2 ! ip dhcp pool DEF network 10.0.18.0 255.255.255.0 ! ip cef ! interface FastEthernet0/0 no ip address shutdown duplex half ! interface Ethernet1/0 ip address 10.0.18.68 255.255.255.0 duplex half ! interface Ethernet1/1 ip address 192.168.1.1 255.255.255.0 ip helper-address 172.16.1.1 duplex half ! interface Ethernet1/2 shutdown duplex half ! interface Ethernet1/3 no ip address shutdown duplex half ! interface FastEthernet2/0 no ip address shutdown duplex half ! ip route 172.16.1.1 255.255.255.255 e1/0 no ip http server no ip pim bidir-enable ! call rsvp-sync ! mgcp profile default ! dial-peer cor custom ! gatekeeper shutdown ! line con 0 line aux 0 line vty 0 4 ! end
Example: Importing DHCP Options
The following example shows how to configure a remote and central server to support the importing of DHCP options. The central server is configured to automatically update DHCP options, such as DNS and WINS addresses, within the DHCP pools. In response to a DHCP request from a local client behind CPE equipment, the remote server can request or “import” these option parameters from the centralized server. See the figure below for a diagram of the network topology.
Central Device
!do not assign this range to DHCP clients ip dhcp-excluded address 10.0.0.1 10.0.0.5 ! ip dhcp pool central ! Specifies network number and mask for DHCP clients network 10.0.0.0 255.255.255.0 ! Specifies the domain name for the client domain-name central ! Specifies DNS server that will respond to DHCP clients when they need to correlate host ! name to ip address dns-server 10.0.0.2 !Specifies the NETBIOS WINS server netbios-name-server 10.0.0.2 ! interface FastEthernet0/0 ip address 10.0.0.1 255.255.255.0 duplex auto speed auto
Remote Device
ip dhcp pool client ! Imports DHCP option parameters into DHCP server database import all network 172.16.2.254 255.255.255.0 ! interface FastEthernet0/0 ip address dhcp duplex auto speed auto
Example: Configuring DHCP Address Allocation Using Option 82
This example shows how to configure two DHCP classes. CLASS1 defines the group of DHCP clients whose address requests contain the relay agent information option with the specified hexadecimal values. CLASS2 defines the group of DHCP clients whose address requests contain the configured relay agent information suboptions. CLASS3 has no pattern configured and is treated as a “match to any” class. This type of class is useful for specifying a “default” class.
The subnet of pool ABC has been divided into three ranges without further subnetting the 10.0.20.0/24 subnet. If there is a DHCP Discover message from the 10.0.20.0/24 subnet with option 82 matching that of class CLASS1, an available address in the range from 10.0.20.1 to 10.0.20.100 will be allocated. If there is no free address in CLASS1’s address range, the DHCP Discover message will be matched against CLASS2, and so on.
Therefore, each class in the DHCP pool will be examined for a match in the order configured by the user. In pool ABC, the order of matching is CLASS1, CLASS2, and finally CLASS3. In pool DEF, class CLASS2 does not have any address range configured. By default, the address range for a particular class is the pool’s entire subnets. Therefore, clients matching CLASS2 may be allocated addresses from 10.0.20.1 to 10.0.20.254.
Multiple pools can be configured with the same class, eliminating the need to configure the same patterns in multiple pools. For example, there may be a need to specify that one or more pools must be used only to service a particular class of devices (for example, cable modems and IP phones).
! Defines the DHCP classes and relay information patterns ip dhcp class CLASS1 relay agent information relay-information hex 01030a0b0c02050000000123 relay-information hex 01030a0b0c02* relay-information hex 01030a0b0c02050000000000 bitmask 0000000000000000000000FF ip dhcp class CLASS2 relay agent information relay-information hex 01040102030402020102 relay-information hex 01040101030402020102 ip dhcp class CLASS3 relay agent information ! Associates the DHCP pool with DHCP classes ip dhcp pool ABC network 10.0.20.0 255.255.255.0 class CLASS1 address range 10.0.20.1 10.0.20.100 class CLASS2 address range 10.0.20.101 10.0.20.200 class CLASS3 address range 10.0.20.201 10.0.20.254 ip dhcp pool DEF network 172.64.2.2 255.255.255.0 class CLASS1 address range 172.64.2.3 172.64.2.10 class CLASS2
Example: Configuring a Static Route with the Next-Hop Dynamically Obtained Through DHCP
The following example shows how to configure two Ethernet interfaces to obtain the next-hop device IP address from the DHCP server:
ip route 10.10.10.0 255.255.255.0 dhcp 200 ip route 10.10.20.1 255.255.255.255 ethernet 1 dhcp
Additional References for Cisco IOS DHCP Server
Related Documents
Related Topic |
Document Title |
---|---|
Cisco IOS commands |
|
DHCP commands: complete command syntax, command mode, command history, defaults, usage guidelines, and examples |
|
DHCP conceptual information |
“DHCP Overview” module |
DHCP relay agent configuration |
“Configuring the Cisco IOS DHCP Relay Agent” module |
DHCP server on-demand address pools |
“Configuring the DHCP Server On-Demand Address Pool Manager” module |
DHCP client configuration |
“Configuring the Cisco IOS DHCP Client” module |
DHCP advanced features |
“Configuring DHCP Services for Accounting and Security” module |
DHCP enhancements for edge-session management |
“Configuring DHCP Enhancements for Edge-Session Management” module |
DHCP options |
“DHCP Options” appendix in the Network Registrar User’s Guide, Release 6.1.1 |
RFCs
RFCs |
Title |
---|---|
RFC 951 |
Bootstrap Protocol (BOOTP) |
RFC 1542 |
Clarifications and Extensions for the Bootstrap Protocol |
RFC 2131 |
Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol |
RFC 2132 |
DHCP Options and BOOTP Vendor Extensions |
Technical Assistance
Description |
Link |
---|---|
The Cisco Support and Documentation website provides online resources to download documentation, software, and tools. Use these resources to install and configure the software and to troubleshoot and resolve technical issues with Cisco products and technologies. Access to most tools on the Cisco Support and Documentation website requires a Cisco.com user ID and password. |
Feature Information for the Cisco IOS DHCP Server
The following table provides release information about the feature or features described in this module. This table lists only the software release that introduced support for a given feature in a given software release train. Unless noted otherwise, subsequent releases of that software release train also support that feature.
Use Cisco Feature Navigator to find information about platform support and Cisco software image support. To access Cisco Feature Navigator, go to www.cisco.com/go/cfn. An account on Cisco.com is not required.
Feature Name |
Releases |
Feature Configuration Information |
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DHCP Server Import All Enhancement |
Cisco IOS XE Release 3.2SE |
The DHCP Server Import All Enhancement feature is an enhancement to the import all command. Prior to this feature, the options imported through the import all command were overwritten by those imported by another subsystem. Through this feature, options imported by multiple subsystems can coexist in the DHCP address pool. When the session is terminated or the lease is released, the imported options are cleared. |
DHCP Server Multiple Subnet |
Cisco IOS XE Release 3.2SE |
The DHCP Server Multiple Subnet feature enables multiple subnets to be configured under the same DHCP address pool. The following commands were introduced or modified: network(DHCP), override default-router. |
DHCP Server Option to Ignore all BOOTP Requests |
Cisco IOS XE Release 3.2SE |
The DHCP Server Option to Ignore all BOOTP Requests feature allows the Cisco IOS DHCP server to selectively ignore and not reply to received Bootstrap Protocol (BOOTP) request packets. The following command was introduced or modified: ip dhcp bootp ignore. |