DHCP Server Question
Charles Swiger
cswiger at mac.com
Tue Mar 23 13:59:13 PST 2004
On Mar 23, 2004, at 4:22 PM, JP wrote:
> So I would remove the "range" entry?
Hmm, no, that's not what I meant. Staticly assigned IP addresses
should be outside the range of dynamic IPs, but you can use both
together. I'll copy a complete, working dhcp.conf file below.
[ It is intended for someone who might have a small home network and
wants to staticly assign IPs using DHCP on a FreeBSD host in a way that
closely resembles the network configuration one would get simply by
using the out-of-box network config using one of those Linksys
broadband routers as the DHCP server. ]
--
-Chuck
=========
# dhcpd.conf
# option definitions common to all supported networks...
option domain-name "pkix.net";
option domain-name-servers 192.168.1.2;
default-lease-time 10000;
max-lease-time 30000;
# If this DHCP server is the official DHCP server for the local
# network, the authoritative directive should be uncommented.
authoritative;
# ad-hoc DNS update scheme - set to "none" to disable dynamic DNS
updates.
ddns-update-style none;
# Use this to send dhcp log messages to a different log file (you also
# have to hack syslog.conf to complete the redirection).
log-facility local7;
subnet 192.168.1.0 netmask 255.255.255.0 {
range 192.168.1.10 192.168.1.254;
option routers 192.168.1.1;
}
subnet 10.1.3.0 netmask 255.255.255.0 {
range 10.1.3.10 10.1.3.254;
option routers 10.1.3.2;
}
host linksys {
hardware ethernet 00:20:78:d2:03:05;
fixed-address 192.168.1.1;
}
host sec {
hardware ethernet 00:a0:cc:75:97:29;
fixed-address 192.168.1.2;
}
[ ... ]
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