4. Introduction
The Dynamic Host Configuration
Protocol (DHCP) is a standardized network used
on Internet.
Clients should require no manual
configuration by the user to connect to the
network.
This is normally accomplished through the use
of a Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol
5. Introduction (Cont)
Requires little or no administrative overhead,
after initial configurations of the DHCP server.
Addresses can be leased for a predefined
amount of time before the lease expires and
must be renewed by the client.
8. DHCP Configuration
Steps to Configure Easy IP
Configure a named DHCP pool
Configure network/subnet mask pool
Configure the default gateway
Configure addresses to exclude from the DHCP
address pool
9. DHCP Configuration
DHCP Pool
Router(config)#ip dhcp pool name
Pool Of Addresses
Router(dhcp-config)#network
net_address subnet_mask
13. Super-scope
A range of IP addresses that span several
Subnets.
The DHCP server can assign these
addresses to clients that are on several
subnets.
A superscope is an administrative feature
of DHCP servers that you can create and
manage through the DHCP console.
14. Multicast scope
A range of class D addresses from 224.0.0.0 to
239.255.255.255 .
only one copy of the message.
(MADCAP) is used to request a multicast address
from a DHCP server.
15. DHCP Scope Properties
Network ID
Subnet mask
Network IP address range
Lease duration
Router
Scope name
Exclusion range