DHCP security and accounting features have been designed and implemented to address the security concerns in PWLANs but also
can be used in other network implementations.
DHCP accounting provides authentication, authorization, and accounting (AAA) and Remote Authentication Dial-In User Service
(RADIUS) support for DHCP. The AAA and RADIUS support improves security by sending secure START and STOP accounting messages.
The configuration of DHCP accounting adds a layer of security that allows DHCP lease assignment and termination to be triggered
for the appropriate RADIUS START and STOP accounting records so that the session state is properly maintained by upstream
devices, such as an SSG. This additional security can help to prevent unauthorized clients or hackers from gaining illegal
entry to the network by spoofing authorized DHCP leases.
The DHCP Secured IP Address Assignment feature prevents IP spoofing by synchronizing the database of the DHCP server with
the ARP table to avoid address hijacking. This secure ARP functionality adds an entry to the ARP table for a client when an
address is allocated that can be deleted by the DHCP server only when a binding expires.
The third feature is ARP autologoff, which adds finer control for probing when authorized users log out. The arp probe interval command specifies when to start a probe (the timeout), how frequent a peer is probed (the interval), and the maximum number
of retries (the count).