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Operating Systems Linux Red Hat Purpose of Static IP address through DHCP Post 302534010 by Lazydog on Sunday 26th of June 2011 12:44:00 PM
Old 06-26-2011
Here is the thought process;

DHCP is use for mobile devices which could/do move around form one network to another, i.e., Laptops.

Static is used for device that would not move around, i.e., Servers, Desktops and Printers.

If your network is growing then any new device that is static would get a static IP address for the new network. Mobile device connecting to the new network would get a DHCP address from the new network.

I guess if you are working for Mom & Pop you don't need to think this way but in an environment of 6000+ employees and 10000+ devices, using DHCP for static is not going to cut it.

Here is another thing to think about. Just because you map an ip address to a MAC address doesn't mean the machine is going to be assigned to that device. MAC spoofing ring any bells? This is why you want devices that provide a serves to have a static IP Address not some sort of DHCP static.

At the end of the day it all comes down to what you prefer. I prefer static devices to have static addresses and mobile devices to have DHCP addresses. If you cannot see far enough into the future to plan ahead for a growing network.......
 

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nets(4) 						     Kernel Interfaces Manual							   nets(4)

NAME
nets - JOIN DHCP server database DESCRIPTION
The nets file is employed by joind, the JOIN DHCP server, to tell it which networks to administer and the ranges of IP addresses available for dynamic assignment on each of those networks. FORMAT Blank lines and lines beginning with the number sign (#) are ignored. Entries are separated from one another by newline characters. Entries consist of three fields: the network number (expressed as an IP address), the IP address or name of a host running joind, which dynamically configures clients on the network, and a range of available addresses for dynamic allocation to hosts on the net. The range is expressed as a pair of IP addresses separated with a dash (-). There must be no whitespace separating the dash from the IP addresses. Several servers may administer a single network, and a single server may administer several networks. Each network-server pair may have several ranges of IP addresses available for dynamic allocation. The network and server IP addresses do not have to be repeated for each entry. A line containing a single field is assumed to be an IP range with the same server and network as the previous entry: a line of two fields is assumed to be a server address and IP range with the same network as the preceding entry. The ranges of addresses served by each cooperating server must be disjoint. This condition is checked by the server on startup. RELATED INFORMATION
joind(8), join.ipaddresses(4) delim off nets(4)
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