Sponsored Content
Top Forums UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users DHCP lease under SuSE is not working. Why? Post 302532656 by aixlover on Tuesday 21st of June 2011 03:03:41 PM
Old 06-21-2011
DHCP lease under SuSE is not working. Why?

Hi,

I got a strange issue here: We are using ISC DHCP v4 which is default in Open SuSE 11.4. These two options 'default-lease-time' and 'max-lease-time' are set in all subnets, with values between 43200 (12 hours) to 518400 (144 hours). See partial dhcpd.conf below please.

Now the lease time from Windows client's ipconfig output is only 10 minutes. Why? (dhcpd on servers restarted many times. ipconfig /release, ipconfig /renew on client run many times)

Please help. Thank you much in advance!
Code:
lease-file-name "/etc/dhcpd.leases";
default-lease-time 43200;  # 12 hours
max-lease-time 86400;      # 24 hours
one-lease-per-client true;

subnet 10.1.1.0 netmask 255.255.255.0 {
pool {
   failover peer "failover";
   range 10.1.1.100 10.1.1.200;
   deny dynamic bootp clients;
}
   option subnet-mask 255.255.255.0;
   option broadcast-address 10.1.1.255;
   option routers 10.1.1.1;
   default-lease-time 86400;
   max-lease-time 518400;
}


Last edited by aixlover; 06-21-2011 at 04:20 PM..
 

10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. SuSE

Touchpad not working - SuSE 8.2 - Toshiba Satellite A30

Hi all, I have a bit of an inexplicable problem.... Up until today, on my Toshiba Satellite A30 Laptop running SuSE 8.2 Professional, I had a dual mouse (USB Mouse / Touchpad) configuration in X and everything was running fine. I booted the laptop today, and for some reason unbeknownst to... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: zazzybob
3 Replies

2. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users

SUSE 9 and 10 NIS clients with RedHat 8.0 NIS server not working

We have a RedHat 8.0 NIS master, with a RedHat 8.0 NIS Slave. We also have a small number of SUSE 9.1 and SUSE 10 machines here for evaluation. However, no matter what i do, the SUSE machines will not talk to the NIS Servers. If i broadcast for NIS Servers for the specified NIS domain, it... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: fishsponge
1 Replies

3. Shell Programming and Scripting

Need help to copy the lease info block

Hi, am having a lease file which contains lots os lease info. In that i have to copy the whole block(shown below) by identifying the mac and change the IP according to the i/p. I have used like sed s/${ip_addr}/$ch_ip/g $temp_file | grep -B5 "${mac}" >> $persistent_file sed... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: SMNK
2 Replies

4. SuSE

Why this DHCP syslog-ng not working

Hi, I have an issue to setup DHCP log in syslog-ng. Here are what I've done: (1) Remove 'log-facility local7;' line from dhcpd.conf (2) Add following lines to /etc/syslog-ng/syslog-ng.conf: destination dhcplog { file("/var/log/dhcpd.log"); }; filter f_dhcpd { level(info) and match("dhcpd");... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: aixlover
1 Replies

5. IP Networking

DHCP lease under SuSE is not working., limited at 10 minutes

Hi, I got a strange issue here: We are using ISC DHCP v4 which is default in Open SuSE 11.4. These two options 'default-lease-time' and 'max-lease-time' are set in all subnets, with values between 43200 (12 hours) to 518400 (144 hours). See partial dhcpd.conf below please. Now the lease... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: aixlover
5 Replies

6. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

remove duplicate entries from dhcp.lease

Hi, I have to parse the dhcp.lease file and have to keep the most recent entry and remove the rest and also the number of lines between any two leases might not always be the same. eg: lease 5.5.5.252 { starts Wed Jul 27 09:48:39 2011 ends Wed Jul 27 21:48:39 2011 tstp Wed Jul... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: bitspradp
1 Replies

7. Red Hat

DHCP lease problem

Hi frnds I am testing DHCP server on vmware.I have two REDHAT 9 vmware machine.DHCP is installed on one machine and second machine is using as a client .I have configured DHCP with Ip Address ,Mask and Gateway.But client machine is not getting ip address.When i type ifconfig command on client it... (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: Vaibhav.T
6 Replies

8. Solaris

Solaris 10- DHCP lease time increase

HI Admins, can anyone tell me how can I increase the lease time in Solaris 10. I want to use that dhcp address for 4 weeks. (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: snchaudhari2
2 Replies

9. IP Networking

Get DHCP relay interfaces IP address using DHCP

Hi All , please view the set up below: ------------------------------------------------------------------- | DHCP Server |-----------| ROUTER & |-----------| Clients | | 192.168.99.1 | - -<eth1>| DHCP-RELAY|<eth2>-- | 192.168.88.X | ... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: gdangoor
2 Replies

10. Ubuntu

Ubuntu Server in VM - DHCP Server not working

Hello. Doing my first steps in Linux and while trying to configure a DHCP server in Linux i encountered some problems: TOPOLOGY: - Laptop with Windows 8.1 - VM Player 12 with Linux installed (Ubuntu Server 14.04) - ICS-DHCP-SERVER installed and running - Another LAPTOP conected to a... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: Portuguevos
1 Replies
dhcp_network(4) 						   File Formats 						   dhcp_network(4)

NAME
dhcp_network - DHCP network tables DESCRIPTION
The Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol (DHCP) network tables are used to map the client identifiers of DHCP clients to IP addresses and the associated configuration parameters of that address. One DHCP network table exists for each network served by the DHCP server, and each table is named using the network's IP address. There is no table or file with the name dhcp_network. The DHCP network tables can exist as ASCII text files, binary text files, or NIS+ tables, depending on the data store used. Since the for- mat of the file could change, the preferred method of managing the DHCP network tables is through the use of dhcpmgr(1M) or the pntadm(1M) command. The dhcp_network file is used as a policy mechanism for whether in.dhcpd(1M) leases addresses on a given network. If the DHCP server is not serving leases or information to a network, there should be no dhcp_network file for that network. To set the DHCP server in informational mode, where it responds to INFORM messages but does not lease addresses on that network, create an empty dhcp_network file for that net- work. For normal operations, where the DHCP server both leases addresses and responds to INFORM packets, create a dhcp_network file using dhcpmgr(1M) or pntadm(1M) and populate it with leasable addresses. The format of the records in a DHCP network table depends on the data store used to maintain the table. However, an entry in a DHCP network table must contain the following fields: Client_ID The client identifier field, Client_ID, is an ASCII hexadecimal representation of the unique octet string value of the DHCP Client Identifier Option (code 61) which identifies a DHCP client. In the absence of the DHCP Client Identifier Option, the DHCP client is identified using the form given below for BOOTP clients. The number of characters in this field must be an even number, with a maximum length of 64 characters. Valid characters are 0 - 9 and A-F. Entries with values of 00 are freely available for dynamic allocation to requesting clients. BOOTP clients are identified by the concatenation of the network's hardware type (as defined by RFC 1340, titled "Assigned Numbers") and the client's hardware address. For example, the following BOOTP client has a hardware type of '01' (10mb ethernet) and a hardware address of 8:0:20:11:12:b7, so its client identifier would be: 010800201112B7 Flags The Flags field is a decimal value, the bit fields of which can have a combination of the following values: 1 (PERMANENT) Evaluation of the Lease field is turned off (lease is permanent). If this bit is not set, Evaluation of the Lease field is enabled and the Lease is DYNAMIC. 2 (MANUAL) This entry has a manual client ID binding (cannot be reclaimed by DHCP server). Client will not be allocated another address. 4 (UNUSABLE) When set, this value means that either through ICMP echo or client DECLINE, this address has been found to be unusable. Can also be used by the network administrator to prevent a certain client from booting, if used in conjunction with the MANUAL flag. 8 (BOOTP) This entry is reserved for allocation to BOOTP clients only. Client_IP The Client_IP field holds the IP address for this entry. This value must be unique in the database. Server_IP This field holds the IP address of the DHCP server which owns this client IP address, and thus is responsible for initial allocation to a requesting client. On a multi-homed DHCP server, this IP address must be the first address returned by gethostbyname(3NSL). Lease This numeric field holds the entry's absolute lease expiration time, and is in seconds since January 1, 1970. It can be decimal, or hexadecimal (if 0x prefixes number). The special value -1 is used to denote a permanent lease. Macro This ASCII text field contains the dhcptab macro name used to look up this entry's configuration parameters in the dhcptab(4) database. Comment This ASCII text field contains an optional comment. TREATISE ON LEASES This section describes how the DHCP/BOOTP server calculates a client's configuration lease using information contained in the dhcptab(4) and DHCP network tables. The server consults the LeaseTim and LeaseNeg symbols in the dhcptab, and the Flags and Lease fields of the chosen IP address record in the DHCP network table. The server first examines the Flags field for the identified DHCP network table record. If the PERMANENT flag is on, then the client's lease is considered permanent. If the PERMANENT flag is not on, the server checks if the client's lease as represented by the Lease field in the network table record has expired. If the lease is not expired, the server checks if the client has requested a new lease. If the LeaseNeg symbol has not been included in the client's dhcptab parameters, then the client's requested lease extension is ignored, and the lease is set to be the time remaining as shown by the Lease field. If the LeaseNeg symbol has been included, then the server will extend the client's lease to the value it requested if this requested lease is less than or equal to the current time plus the value of the client's LeaseTim dhcptab param- eter. If the client's requested lease is greater than policy allows (value of LeaseTim), then the client is given a lease equal to the current time plus the value of LeaseTim. If LeaseTim is not set, then the default LeaseTim value is one hour. For more information about the dhcptab symbols, see dhcptab(4). ATTRIBUTES
See attributes(5) for a description of the following attribute: +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+ | ATTRIBUTE TYPE | ATTRIBUTE VALUE | +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+ |Availability |SUNWdhcsu | +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+ |Interface Stability |Evolving | +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+ SEE ALSO
dhcpconfig(1M), dhcpmgr(1M), dhtadm(1M), in.dhcpd(1M), pntadm(1M), dhcptab(4), dhcp(5), dhcp_modules(5), attributes(5) Solaris DHCP Service Developer's Guide System Administration Guide: IP Services Reynolds, J. and J. Postel, Assigned Numbers, STD 2, RFC 1340, USC/Information Sciences Institute, July 1992. SunOS 5.10 5 Mar 2004 dhcp_network(4)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 08:45 AM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy