The error happening here is clear. These are the relevant log lines:
This message means the local system has the given ip at the given interface. But there is no subnet declaration for that. The subnet declaration in your dhcpd.conf is:
The both does not match. You probably need to add a correct subnet declaration for the same net as the IP 10.210.148.7 is in. But you should not do that without knowing exactly what you are doing and what ip address range may be allowed and dedicated for that. Otherwise you'll disturb network operation in your network by probably causing ip address conflicts with static assigned ip addresses which are the same as in your subnet declaration.
---
Another Guess:
Maybe this is not the dhcp server which is serving the ip address of serverX and there is another dhcp-server active? As far as I see this dhcp-service is doing completely nothing because of the line: Mar 7 16:19:30 trber dhcpd: exiting..
You can check that by reviewing the system log of serverX and look for the ip/mac address of the dhcp-server serving the address.
You can also check with a packet sniffer(tcpdump) what's going on on the network and which ip-address is replying to dhcp-requests.(udp ports 67 & 68).
Last edited by stomp; 03-08-2019 at 08:15 AM..
Reason: Removed first part because it was a wrong guess.
I have intall a REdhat 9.0 as a server and Ive configure to act as a DHCP however Im having technical problems b/c the file /etc/dhcpd.conf does not exists. I went to the text edit and I created :
subnet 192.192.168.100.0 netmask 255.255.255.0 {
range 192.168.100.10 192.168.100.150;... (1 Reply)
Thanks for reply , i realy love using unix ... is there anyone who can give me an instruction to configure DHCP Server in Sun Solaris 10 just a quick guide .. i know how to configure DHCP Server in Windows operating System
..But i want also learn how to configure it from the SUN SOLARIS 10...... (6 Replies)
Hi,
I need to get a script together to edit the dhcp service configuration file dhcpd.conf.
Mac addresses are defined in classes ex.
class "HOST1" { match if substring (hardware, 1,18)=00:11:11:FF:FF:FF;}
class "HOST2" ...
class "HOST3" ...
...
followed by allow or deny statements:... (4 Replies)
Hi,
I've setup DHCP Server on RH linux AS3 and everything works fine except static routes. They are not getting effected on client systems.
My dhcpd.conf:
+++++++++++
ddns-update-style interim;
ddns-updates off;
option domain-name-servers 192.168.116.122;
option domain-name... (3 Replies)
I am trying to use sed to remove entries from my dhcpd.conf file.
The form of the file is:
host foo {
option 1
option 2
}
host bar {
option 1
option 2
}
I was trying to use a label like:
sed -e :a -e "s/^host bar {*//g;/{/N;//ba" /etc/dhcpd.conf... (2 Replies)
I am trying to configure my jumpstart server to install Solaris 10 on a T1000 machine(target) over WAN. I do not know the IP address of the client, i wish the client to get the IP address from DHCP.
how do i configure my /etc/netboot hierarchy. One option would be to keep the wanboot.conf in... (1 Reply)
Hi,
While installation of apache on linux, we perform the below tasks.
1) Untar
2) configure
3) make
4) make install.
I wanted to understand the difference and working of configure/make/make install.
Can any one help me understanding this?
Thanks in advance. (1 Reply)
Hi all,
I am too new for this stuff and i am lost in perl tutorials. I need help to change dhcp entries in .conf file with a perl script.
The file entries are like below :
host bertha-clp-0 {
hardware ethernet AA:0A:A0:00:6c:40;
fixed-address 10.10.10.72;
option... (6 Replies)
Hi,
I have to prepare a script to check the dhcp conf file. The script has to check for a specific parameter called circuit ID. If the Circuit ID is unique it should show the output that it is unique and if it is duplicate it should show that the Circuit ID is duplicate. I have prepared the... (4 Replies)
Hy everybody,
Within a dhcpd.conf file, we got some fixed IP adresses from 192.168.0.1 - 192.168.0.254.
Sample:
#ddns-update-style interim;
ddns-update-style none;
ignore client-updates;
deny client-updates;
authoritative;
#### By red for PXE Booting
allow booting;
allow bootp;
###... (17 Replies)
Discussion started by: hermouche
17 Replies
LEARN ABOUT XFREE86
dhcp
dhcp(5) Standards, Environments, and Macros dhcp(5)NAME
dhcp - Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol
DESCRIPTION
Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol (DHCP) enables host systems in a TCP/IP network to be configured automatically for the network as they
boot. DHCP uses a client/server mechanism: servers store configuration information for clients, and provide that information upon a
client's request. The information can include the client's IP address and information about network services available to the client.
This manual page provides a brief summary of the Solaris DHCP implementation.
Solaris DHCP Client
The Solaris DHCP client is implemented as background daemon, dhcpagent(1M). This daemon is started automatically during bootup if there
exists at least one dhcp.interface file in /etc. Only interfaces with a corresponding /etc/dhcp.interface file are automatically configured
during boot. Network parameters needed for system configuration during bootup are extracted from the information recieved by the daemon
through the use of the dhcpinfo(1) command. The daemon's default behavior can be altered by changing the tunables in the /etc/default/dhc-
pagent file. The daemon is controlled by the ifconfig(1M) utility. Check the status of the daemon using the netstat(1M) and ifconfig(1M)
commands.
Solaris DHCP Server
The Solaris DHCP server is implemented as a background daemon, in.dhcpd(1M). This daemon can deliver network configuration information to
either BOOTP or DHCP clients. The Solaris DHCP service can be managed using the dhcpmgr(1M) GUI or the command line utilities dhcpcon-
fig(1M), dhtadm(1M), and pntadm(1M).
DHCP Configuration Tables
The Solaris DHCP server stores client configuration information in the following two types of tables:
dhcptab tables Contain macros and options (also known as symbols), used to construct a package of configuration information to
send to each DHCP client. There exists only one dhcptab for the DHCP service. The dhcptab(4) can be viewed and mod-
ified using the dhtadm(1M) command or dhcpmgr(1M) graphical utility. See dhcptab(4) for more information about the
syntax of dhcptab records. See dhcp_inittab(4) for more information about the DHCP options and symbols.
DHCP network tables DHCP network tables, which contain mappings of client IDs to IP addresses and parameters associated with those
addresses. Network tables are named with the IP address of the network, and can be created, viewed, and modified
using the pntadm command or dhcpmgr graphical utility. See dhcp_network(4) for more information about network
tables.
SEE ALSO dhcpinfo(1), dhcpagent(1M), dhcpconfig(1M), dhcpmgr(1M), dhtadm(1M), ifconfig(1M), in.dhcpd(1M), netstat(1M), pntadm(1M), syslog(3C),
dhcp_network(4), dhcptab(4), dhcpsvc.conf(4), dhcp_inittab(4), dhcp_modules(5)
Solaris DHCP Service Developer's Guide
Alexander, S., and R. Droms. RFC 2132, DHCP Options and BOOTP Vendor Extensions. Silicon Graphics, Inc. Bucknell University. March 1997.
Droms, R. RFC 1534, Interoperation Between DHCP and BOOTP. Bucknell University. October 1993.
Droms, R. RFC 2131, Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol. Bucknell University. March 1997.
Wimer, W. RFC 1542, Clarifications and Extensions for the Bootstrap Protocol. Carnegie Mellon University. October 1993.
SunOS 5.10 13 Mar 2001 dhcp(5)