1dhcpd(8)                    System Manager's Manual                   dhcpd(8)
2
3
4

NAME

6       dhcpd - Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol Server
7

SYNOPSIS

9       dhcpd  [  -p port ] [ -f ] [ -d ] [ -q ] [ -t | -T ] [ -4 | -6 ] [ -4o6
10       port ] [ -s server ] [ -cf config-file ] [ -lf lease-file ] [ -pf  pid-
11       file  ]  [ --no-pid ] [ -user user ] [ -group group ] [ -chroot dir ] [
12       -tf trace-output-file ] [ -play trace-playback-file ] [ if0 [ ...ifN  ]
13       ]
14
15       dhcpd --version
16

DESCRIPTION

18       The  Internet  Systems  Consortium  DHCP  Server, dhcpd, implements the
19       Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol (DHCP) and the  Internet  Bootstrap
20       Protocol (BOOTP).  DHCP allows hosts on a TCP/IP network to request and
21       be assigned IP addresses, and also to discover  information  about  the
22       network to which they are attached.  BOOTP provides similar functional‐
23       ity, with certain restrictions.
24

OPERATION

26       The DHCP protocol allows a host which is unknown to the network  admin‐
27       istrator to be automatically assigned a new IP address out of a pool of
28       IP addresses for its network.  In order for this to work,  the  network
29       administrator  allocates  address  pools in each subnet and enters them
30       into the dhcpd.conf(5) file.
31
32       There are two versions of the DHCP  protocol  DHCPv4  and  DHCPv6.   At
33       startup  the  server  may be started for one or the other via the -4 or
34       -6 arguments.
35
36       On startup, dhcpd reads the dhcpd.conf file and stores a list of avail‐
37       able  addresses  on  each  subnet in memory.  When a client requests an
38       address using the DHCP protocol, dhcpd allocates  an  address  for  it.
39       Each  client is assigned a lease, which expires after an amount of time
40       chosen by the administrator  (by  default,  one  day).   Before  leases
41       expire,  the clients to which leases are assigned are expected to renew
42       them in order to continue to use  the  addresses.   Once  a  lease  has
43       expired,  the client to which that lease was assigned is no longer per‐
44       mitted to use the leased IP address.
45
46       In order to keep track of  leases  across  system  reboots  and  server
47       restarts,  dhcpd  keeps  a  list  of  leases  it  has  assigned  in the
48       dhcpd.leases(5) file.  Before dhcpd  grants  a  lease  to  a  host,  it
49       records  the lease in this file and makes sure that the contents of the
50       file are flushed to disk.  This ensures that even in  the  event  of  a
51       system crash, dhcpd will not forget about a lease that it has assigned.
52       On  startup,  after  reading  the  dhcpd.conf  file,  dhcpd  reads  the
53       dhcpd.leases  file  to  refresh  its memory about what leases have been
54       assigned.
55
56       New leases are appended to the end of the dhcpd.leases file.  In  order
57       to  prevent the file from becoming arbitrarily large, from time to time
58       dhcpd creates a new dhcpd.leases file from its in-core lease  database.
59       Once  this  file  has  been  written  to  disk, the old file is renamed
60       dhcpd.leases~, and the new file is renamed dhcpd.leases.  If the system
61       crashes  in  the  middle  of  this process, whichever dhcpd.leases file
62       remains will contain all the lease information, so there is no need for
63       a special crash recovery process.
64
65       BOOTP  support is also provided by this server.  Unlike DHCP, the BOOTP
66       protocol does  not  provide  a  protocol  for  recovering  dynamically-
67       assigned  addresses once they are no longer needed.  It is still possi‐
68       ble to dynamically assign addresses to BOOTP clients, but some adminis‐
69       trative  process  for  reclaiming  addresses  is required.  By default,
70       leases are granted to BOOTP clients in perpetuity, although the network
71       administrator  may set an earlier cutoff date or a shorter lease length
72       for BOOTP leases if that makes sense.
73
74       BOOTP clients may also be served in the old standard way, which  is  to
75       simply  provide  a  declaration  in  the dhcpd.conf file for each BOOTP
76       client, permanently assigning an address to each client.
77
78       Whenever changes are  made  to  the  dhcpd.conf  file,  dhcpd  must  be
79       restarted.  To restart dhcpd, send a SIGTERM (signal 15) to the process
80       ID contained in /var/run/dhcpd.pid, and then re-invoke dhcpd.   Because
81       the  DHCP  server  database  is not as lightweight as a BOOTP database,
82       dhcpd does not automatically restart itself when it sees  a  change  to
83       the dhcpd.conf file.
84
85       Note:  We get a lot of complaints about this.  We realize that it would
86       be nice if one could send a SIGHUP to the server and have it reload the
87       database.   This  is not technically impossible, but it would require a
88       great deal of work, our resources are extremely limited, and  they  can
89       be  better spent elsewhere.  So please don't complain about this on the
90       mailing list unless you're prepared to fund a project to implement this
91       feature, or prepared to do it yourself.
92

COMMAND LINE

94       The  names  of  the network interfaces on which dhcpd should listen for
95       broadcasts may be specified on the command line.  This should  be  done
96       on  systems where dhcpd is unable to identify non-broadcast interfaces,
97       but should not be required on other systems.  If no interface names are
98       specified  on  the  command line dhcpd will identify all network inter‐
99       faces which are up, eliminating non-broadcast interfaces  if  possible,
100       and listen for DHCP broadcasts on each interface.
101

COMMAND LINE OPTIONS

103       -4     Run as a DHCP server. This is the default and cannot be combined
104              with -6.
105
106       -6     Run as a DHCPv6 server. This cannot be combined with -4.
107
108       -4o6 port
109              Participate in the DHCPv4 over DHCPv6 protocol specified by  RFC
110              7341.  This associates a DHCPv4 and a DHCPv6 server to allow the
111              v4 server to receive v4 requests that were encapsulated in a  v6
112              packet.  Communication between the two servers is done on a pair
113              of UDP sockets bound to ::1 port and port + 1. Both servers must
114              be launched using the same port argument.
115
116       -p port
117              The  UDP  port number on which dhcpd should listen.  If unspeci‐
118              fied dhcpd uses the default port of 67.  This is  mostly  useful
119              for debugging purposes.
120
121       -s address
122              Specify  an  address  or  host  name  to which dhcpd should send
123              replies rather than  the  broadcast  address  (255.255.255.255).
124              This option is only supported in IPv4.
125
126       -f     Force  dhcpd to run as a foreground process instead of as a dae‐
127              mon in the background.  This is useful when running dhcpd  under
128              a  debugger,  or when running it out of inittab on System V sys‐
129              tems.
130
131       -d     Send log messages to the standard error descriptor.  This can be
132              useful  for debugging, and also at sites where a complete log of
133              all dhcp activity must be kept but syslogd is  not  reliable  or
134              otherwise  cannot  be used.  Normally, dhcpd will log all output
135              using the syslog(3)  function  with  the  log  facility  set  to
136              LOG_DAEMON.   Note  that -d implies -f (the daemon will not fork
137              itself into the background).
138
139       -q     Be quiet at startup.  This suppresses the printing of the entire
140              copyright  message during startup.  This might be desirable when
141              starting dhcpd from a system startup script (e.g., /etc/rc).
142
143       -t     Test the configuration file.  The server tests the configuration
144              file  for  correct  syntax,  but will not attempt to perform any
145              network operations.  This can be used to test a  new  configura‐
146              tion file automatically before installing it.
147
148       -T     Test  the  lease file.  The server tests the lease file for cor‐
149              rect syntax, but will not attempt to perform any network  opera‐
150              tions.  In addition to reading the lease file it will also write
151              the leases to a temporary lease file.  The  current  lease  file
152              will  not  be  modified  and  the  temporary  lease file will be
153              removed upon completion of the test. This can be used to test  a
154              new lease file automatically before installing it.
155
156       -user user
157              Setuid  to  user after completing privileged operations, such as
158              creating sockets that listen on  privileged  ports.   This  also
159              causes  the lease file to be owned by user.  This option is only
160              available if the code  was  compiled  with  the  PARANOIA  patch
161              (./configure --enable-paranoia).
162
163       -group group
164              Setgid  to group after completing privileged operations, such as
165              creating sockets that listen on  privileged  ports.   This  also
166              causes  the lease file to use group.  This option is only avail‐
167              able if the code was compiled with the PARANOIA patch (./config‐
168              ure --enable-paranoia).
169
170       -chroot dir
171              Chroot to directory.  This may occur before or after reading the
172              configuration files depending on whether the code  was  compiled
173              with  the  EARLY_CHROOT  option  enabled  (./configure --enable-
174              early-chroot).  This option is only available if  the  code  was
175              compiled  with  the  PARANOIA  patch (./configure --enable-para‐
176              noia).
177
178       -tf tracefile
179              Specify a file into which the entire startup state of the server
180              and  all  the transactions it processes are logged.  This can be
181              useful in submitting bug reports - if you  are  getting  a  core
182              dump  every  so  often,  you  can  start the server with the -tf
183              option and then, when the server dumps core, the trace file will
184              contain  all the transactions that led up to it dumping core, so
185              that the problem can be easily debugged with -play.
186
187       -play playfile
188              Specify a file from which the entire startup state of the server
189              and  all  the  transactions  it  processed  are read.  The -play
190              option must be specified with an alternate lease file, using the
191              -lf switch, so that the DHCP server doesn't wipe out your exist‐
192              ing lease file with its test data.  The DHCP server will  refuse
193              to  operate  in  playback  mode  unless you specify an alternate
194              lease file.
195
196       --version
197              Print version number and exit.
198
199       Modifying default file locations: The following options can be used  to
200       modify  the  locations dhcpd uses for its files.  Because of the impor‐
201       tance of using the same lease database at all times when running  dhcpd
202       in  production,  these  options  should  be used only for testing lease
203       files or database files in a non-production environment.
204
205       -cf config-file
206              Path to alternate configuration file.
207
208       -lf lease-file
209              Path to alternate lease file.
210
211       -pf pid-file
212              Path to alternate pid file.
213
214       --no-pid
215              Option to disable writing pid files.   By  default  the  program
216              will  write  a  pid  file.   If the program is invoked with this
217              option it will not check for an existing server process.
218

PORTS

220       During operations the server may use multiple UDP and TCP ports to pro‐
221       vide  different  functions.  Which ports are opened depends on both the
222       way you compiled your code and the configuration you supply.  The  fol‐
223       lowing should provide you an idea of what ports may be in use.
224
225       Normally a DHCPv4 server will open a raw UDP socket to receive and send
226       most DHCPv4 packets.  It also opens a fallback UDP socket  for  use  in
227       sending  unicast  packets.  Normally these will both use the well known
228       port number for BOOTPS.
229
230       For each DHCPv4 failover peer you list in the configuration file  there
231       will  be  a TCP socket listening for connections on the ports specified
232       in the configuration file.   When  the  peer  connects  there  will  be
233       another  socket  for  the  established connection.  For the established
234       connection the side (primary or secondary) opening the connection  will
235       use a random port.
236
237       For   DHCPv6   the  server  opens  a  UDP  socket  on  the  well  known
238       dhcpv6-server port.
239
240       The server opens an icmp socket for doing ping  requests  to  check  if
241       addresses are in use.
242
243       If you have included an omapi-port statement in your configuration file
244       then the server will open a TCP socket on that port to listen for OMPAI
245       connections.  When something connects another port will be used for the
246       established connection.
247
248       When DDNS is enabled at compile time (see includes/site.h)  the  server
249       will  open  both  a v4 and a v6 UDP socket on random ports, unless DDNS
250       updates are globally disabled by setting ddns-update-style to  none  in
251       the configuration file.
252

CONFIGURATION

254       The  syntax  of  the  dhcpd.conf(5) file is discussed separately.  This
255       section should be used as an overview of the configuration process, and
256       the dhcpd.conf(5) documentation should be consulted for detailed refer‐
257       ence information.
258

Subnets

260       dhcpd needs to know the subnet numbers and netmasks of all subnets  for
261       which  it  will be providing service.  In addition, in order to dynami‐
262       cally allocate addresses, it must be assigned one  or  more  ranges  of
263       addresses on each subnet which it can in turn assign to client hosts as
264       they boot.  Thus, a very simple configuration  providing  DHCP  support
265       might look like this:
266
267            subnet 239.252.197.0 netmask 255.255.255.0 {
268              range 239.252.197.10 239.252.197.250;
269            }
270
271       Multiple address ranges may be specified like this:
272
273            subnet 239.252.197.0 netmask 255.255.255.0 {
274              range 239.252.197.10 239.252.197.107;
275              range 239.252.197.113 239.252.197.250;
276            }
277
278       If  a  subnet  will  only be provided with BOOTP service and no dynamic
279       address assignment, the range clause can be left out entirely, but  the
280       subnet statement must appear.
281

Lease Lengths

283       DHCP  leases  can  be  assigned  almost any length from zero seconds to
284       infinity.  What lease length makes sense for any given subnet,  or  for
285       any given installation, will vary depending on the kinds of hosts being
286       served.
287
288       For example, in an office environment where systems are added from time
289       to  time  and  removed  from  time  to time, but move relatively infre‐
290       quently, it might make sense to allow lease times of a month  or  more.
291       In  a final test environment on a manufacturing floor, it may make more
292       sense to assign a maximum lease length of 30 minutes - enough  time  to
293       go  through a simple test procedure on a network appliance before pack‐
294       aging it up for delivery.
295
296       It is possible to specify two lease lengths: the  default  length  that
297       will  be  assigned  if  a  client  doesn't ask for any particular lease
298       length, and a maximum lease length.  These are specified as clauses  to
299       the subnet command:
300
301            subnet 239.252.197.0 netmask 255.255.255.0 {
302              range 239.252.197.10 239.252.197.107;
303              default-lease-time 600;
304              max-lease-time 7200;
305            }
306
307       This  particular  subnet  declaration specifies a default lease time of
308       600 seconds (ten minutes), and a maximum lease  time  of  7200  seconds
309       (two hours).  Other common values would be 86400 (one day), 604800 (one
310       week) and 2592000 (30 days).
311
312       Each subnet need not have the same lease—in the case of an office envi‐
313       ronment and a manufacturing environment served by the same DHCP server,
314       it might make sense to have widely disparate  values  for  default  and
315       maximum lease times on each subnet.
316

BOOTP Support

318       Each  BOOTP  client must be explicitly declared in the dhcpd.conf file.
319       A very basic client declaration will specify the client network  inter‐
320       face's  hardware  address  and the IP address to assign to that client.
321       If the client needs to be able to load a boot  file  from  the  server,
322       that  file's name must be specified.  A simple bootp client declaration
323       might look like this:
324
325            host haagen {
326              hardware ethernet 08:00:2b:4c:59:23;
327              fixed-address 239.252.197.9;
328              filename "/tftpboot/haagen.boot";
329            }
330

Options

332       DHCP (and also  BOOTP  with  Vendor  Extensions)  provide  a  mechanism
333       whereby the server can provide the client with information about how to
334       configure its network interface (e.g., subnet mask), and also  how  the
335       client  can access various network services (e.g., DNS, IP routers, and
336       so on).
337
338       These options can be specified on a per-subnet basis,  and,  for  BOOTP
339       clients,  also on a per-client basis.  In the event that a BOOTP client
340       declaration specifies options that are also  specified  in  its  subnet
341       declaration,  the  options  specified  in  the  client declaration take
342       precedence.  A reasonably complete DHCP configuration might look  some‐
343       thing like this:
344
345            subnet 239.252.197.0 netmask 255.255.255.0 {
346              range 239.252.197.10 239.252.197.250;
347              default-lease-time 600;
348              max-lease-time 7200;
349              option subnet-mask 255.255.255.0;
350              option broadcast-address 239.252.197.255;
351              option routers 239.252.197.1;
352              option domain-name-servers 239.252.197.2, 239.252.197.3;
353              option domain-name "isc.org";
354            }
355
356       A  bootp host on that subnet that needs to be in a different domain and
357       use a different name server might be declared as follows:
358
359            host haagen {
360              hardware ethernet 08:00:2b:4c:59:23;
361              fixed-address 239.252.197.9;
362              filename "/tftpboot/haagen.boot";
363              option domain-name-servers 192.5.5.1;
364              option domain-name "example.com";
365            }
366
367       A more complete description of the dhcpd.conf file syntax  is  provided
368       in dhcpd.conf(5).
369

OMAPI

371       The  DHCP server provides the capability to modify some of its configu‐
372       ration while it is running, without stopping it, modifying its database
373       files,  and restarting it.  This capability is currently provided using
374       OMAPI - an API for manipulating remote objects.  OMAPI clients  connect
375       to  the  server  using  TCP/IP,  authenticate, and can then examine the
376       server's current status and make changes to it.
377
378       Rather than implementing the underlying OMAPI protocol  directly,  user
379       programs  should  use  the  dhcpctl  API or OMAPI itself.  Dhcpctl is a
380       wrapper that handles some of the housekeeping chores  that  OMAPI  does
381       not  do  automatically.  Dhcpctl and OMAPI are documented in dhcpctl(3)
382       and omapi(3).
383
384       OMAPI exports objects, which can then be examined  and  modified.   The
385       DHCP  server exports the following objects: lease, host, failover-state
386       and group.  Each object has a number  of  methods  that  are  provided:
387       lookup,  create,  and  destroy.  In addition, it is possible to look at
388       attributes that are stored on objects, and  in  some  cases  to  modify
389       those attributes.
390

THE LEASE OBJECT

392       Leases  can't currently be created or destroyed, but they can be looked
393       up to examine and modify their state.
394
395       Leases have the following attributes:
396
397       state integer lookup, examine
398            1 = free
399            2 = active
400            3 = expired
401            4 = released
402            5 = abandoned
403            6 = reset
404            7 = backup
405            8 = reserved
406            9 = bootp
407
408       ip-address data lookup, examine
409            The IP address of the lease.
410
411       dhcp-client-identifier data lookup, examine, update
412            The client identifier that the client used when  it  acquired  the
413            lease.   Not  all  clients send client identifiers, so this may be
414            empty.
415
416       client-hostname data examine, update
417            The value the client sent in the host-name option.
418
419       host handle examine
420            the host declaration associated with this lease, if any.
421
422       subnet handle examine
423            the subnet object associated with this lease (the subnet object is
424            not currently supported).
425
426       pool handle examine
427            the pool object associated with this lease (the pool object is not
428            currently supported).
429
430       billing-class handle examine
431            the handle to the class to which this lease is  currently  billed,
432            if any (the class object is not currently supported).
433
434       hardware-address data examine, update
435            the  hardware  address  (chaddr)  field sent by the client when it
436            acquired its lease.
437
438       hardware-type integer examine, update
439            the type of the network interface that the client reported when it
440            acquired its lease.
441
442       ends time examine
443            the time when the lease's current state ends, as understood by the
444            client.
445
446       tstp time examine
447            the time when the lease's current state ends, as understood by the
448            server.
449       tsfp time examine
450            the  adjusted  time when the lease's current state ends, as under‐
451            stood by the failover peer (if there is  no  failover  peer,  this
452            value  is  undefined).   Generally this value is only adjusted for
453            expired, released, or reset leases while the server  is  operating
454            in  partner-down state, and otherwise is simply the value supplied
455            by the peer.
456       atsfp time examine
457            the actual tsfp value sent from the peer.  This value is forgotten
458            when  a lease binding state change is made, to facilitate retrans‐
459            mission logic.
460
461       cltt time examine
462            The time of the last transaction with the client on this lease.
463

THE HOST OBJECT

465       Hosts can be created, destroyed, looked up, examined and modified.   If
466       a  host declaration is created or deleted using OMAPI, that information
467       will be recorded in the dhcpd.leases file.  It is permissible to delete
468       host declarations that are declared in the dhcpd.conf file.
469
470       Hosts have the following attributes:
471
472       name data lookup, examine, modify
473            the  name of the host declaration.  This name must be unique among
474            all host declarations.
475
476       group handle examine, modify
477            the named group associated with the host declaration, if there  is
478            one.
479
480       hardware-address data lookup, examine, modify
481            the  link-layer  address that will be used to match the client, if
482            any.  Only valid if hardware-type is also present.
483
484       hardware-type integer lookup, examine, modify
485            the type of the network interface that will be used to  match  the
486            client, if any.  Only valid if hardware-address is also present.
487
488       dhcp-client-identifier data lookup, examine, modify
489            the  dhcp-client-identifier  option that will be used to match the
490            client, if any.
491
492       ip-address data examine, modify
493            a fixed IP address which  is  reserved  for  a  DHCP  client  that
494            matches  this  host  declaration.   The  IP  address  will only be
495            assigned to the client if it is valid for the network  segment  to
496            which the client is connected.
497
498       statements data modify
499            a  list  of  statements  in the format of the dhcpd.conf file that
500            will be executed whenever a message from the client is being  pro‐
501            cessed.
502
503       known integer examine, modify
504            if nonzero, indicates that a client matching this host declaration
505            will be treated as known in  pool  permit  lists.   If  zero,  the
506            client will not be treated as known.
507

THE GROUP OBJECT

509       Named  groups  can be created, destroyed, looked up, examined and modi‐
510       fied.  If a group declaration is created or deleted using  OMAPI,  that
511       information will be recorded in the dhcpd.leases file.  It is permissi‐
512       ble to delete group declarations that are declared  in  the  dhcpd.conf
513       file.
514
515       Named  groups currently can only be associated with hosts - this allows
516       one set of statements to be efficiently attached to more than one  host
517       declaration.
518
519       Groups have the following attributes:
520
521       name data
522            the  name  of  the group.  All groups that are created using OMAPI
523            must have names, and the names must be unique among all groups.
524
525       statements data
526            a list of statements in the format of  the  dhcpd.conf  file  that
527            will  be executed whenever a message from a client whose host dec‐
528            laration references this group is processed.
529

THE CONTROL OBJECT

531       The control object allows you to shut the server down.  If  the  server
532       is  doing  failover  with another peer, it will make a clean transition
533       into the shutdown state and notify its peer, so that the  peer  can  go
534       into  partner  down,  and  then record the "recover" state in the lease
535       file so that when the server is restarted, it will automatically resyn‐
536       chronize with its peer.
537
538       On shutdown the server will also attempt to cleanly shut down all OMAPI
539       connections.  If these connections do not go down  cleanly  after  five
540       seconds,  they  are  shut down preemptively.  It can take as much as 25
541       seconds from the beginning of the shutdown process to the time that the
542       server actually exits.
543
544       To  shut  the  server  down,  open its control object and set the state
545       attribute to 2.
546

THE FAILOVER-STATE OBJECT

548       The failover-state object is the object that tracks the  state  of  the
549       failover  protocol  as  it  is being managed for a given failover peer.
550       The failover object has the following attributes (please see dhcpd.conf
551       (5) for explanations about what these attributes mean):
552
553       name data examine
554            Indicates the name of the failover peer relationship, as described
555            in the server's dhcpd.conf file.
556
557       partner-address data examine
558            Indicates the failover partner's IP address.
559
560       local-address data examine
561            Indicates the IP address that is being used by the DHCP server for
562            this failover pair.
563
564       partner-port data examine
565            Indicates  the TCP port on which the failover partner is listening
566            for failover protocol connections.
567
568       local-port data examine
569            Indicates the TCP port on which the DHCP server is  listening  for
570            failover protocol connections for this failover pair.
571
572       max-outstanding-updates integer examine
573            Indicates  the number of updates that can be outstanding and unac‐
574            knowledged at any given time, in this failover relationship.
575
576       mclt integer examine
577            Indicates the maximum client lead time in this failover  relation‐
578            ship.
579
580       load-balance-max-secs integer examine
581            Indicates the maximum value for the secs field in a client request
582            before load balancing is bypassed.
583
584       load-balance-hba data examine
585            Indicates the load balancing hash bucket array for  this  failover
586            relationship.
587
588       local-state integer examine, modify
589            Indicates  the  present  state of the DHCP server in this failover
590            relationship.  Possible values for state are:
591
592                 1   - startup
593                 2   - normal
594                 3   - communications interrupted
595                 4   - partner down
596                 5   - potential conflict
597                 6   - recover
598                 7   - paused
599                 8   - shutdown
600                 9   - recover done
601                 10  - resolution interrupted
602                 11  - conflict done
603                 254 - recover wait
604
605            (Note that some of  the  above  values  have  changed  since  DHCP
606            3.0.x.)
607
608            In  general  it  is not a good idea to make changes to this state.
609            However, in the case that the failover  partner  is  known  to  be
610            down,  it can be useful to set the DHCP server's failover state to
611            partner down.  At this point the DHCP server will take  over  ser‐
612            vice  of  the  failover  partner's leases as soon as possible, and
613            will give out normal leases, not leases  that  are  restricted  by
614            MCLT.   If  you  do put the DHCP server into the partner-down when
615            the other DHCP server is not in the partner-down state, but is not
616            reachable,  IP  address  assignment  conflicts  are possible, even
617            likely.  Once a server has been put into  partner-down  mode,  its
618            failover  partner must not be brought back online until communica‐
619            tion is possible between the two servers.
620
621       partner-state integer examine
622            Indicates the present state of the failover partner.
623
624       local-stos integer examine
625            Indicates the time at which the DHCP server  entered  its  present
626            state in this failover relationship.
627
628       partner-stos integer examine
629            Indicates  the  time  at  which  the  failover partner entered its
630            present state.
631
632       hierarchy integer examine
633            Indicates whether the DHCP server is primary (0) or secondary  (1)
634            in this failover relationship.
635
636       last-packet-sent integer examine
637            Indicates  the  time  at which the most recent failover packet was
638            sent by this DHCP server to its failover partner.
639
640       last-timestamp-received integer examine
641            Indicates the timestamp that was  on  the  failover  message  most
642            recently received from the failover partner.
643
644       skew integer examine
645            Indicates  the  skew between the failover partner's clock and this
646            DHCP server's clock
647
648       max-response-delay integer examine
649            Indicates the time in  seconds  after  which,  if  no  message  is
650            received  from  the failover partner, the partner is assumed to be
651            out of communication.
652
653       cur-unacked-updates integer examine
654            Indicates the number of update messages that  have  been  received
655            from the failover partner but not yet processed.
656

FILES

658       /etc/dhcp/dhcpd.conf,  /var/lib/dhcpd/dhcpd.leases, /var/run/dhcpd.pid,
659       /var/lib/dhcpd/dhcpd.leases~.
660

SEE ALSO

662       dhclient(8), dhcrelay(8), dhcpd.conf(5), dhcpd.leases(5)
663

AUTHOR

665       dhcpd(8) was originally written by Ted  Lemon  under  a  contract  with
666       Vixie  Labs.  Funding for this project was provided by Internet Systems
667       Consortium.  Version 3 of the DHCP server was funded by  Nominum,  Inc.
668       Information   about   Internet   Systems  Consortium  is  available  at
669       https://www.isc.org/.
670
671
672
673                                                                      dhcpd(8)
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