Mapping a MAC to an IP...
Simon Hobson
dhcp1 at thehobsons.co.uk
Wed Jan 21 15:59:52 UTC 2009
At 10:51 -0500 21/1/09, Todd Snyder wrote:
>My understanding is that you have to "break" the range to add host
>declarations.
>
>This, to me, is the biggest pain I have with DHCP in a a production
>environment. What could be a nice general range declaration, with some
>hosts entries turns into a bunch of broken up and hard to dissect range
>declarations with hosts declarations sprinkled throughout. for 5
>entries, it's no biggie, but when putting in 50 or 60 hosts into a /24
>there are a lot of lines. Multiply that by a few /24's and maintenance
>gets to be quite difficult at times.
I've never had a problem that way, but then I'm managed my IP's
rather than scattering stuff all over the subnet in a random manner !
I guess that's no help if you've inherited a network from an admin
that just plugged stuff in and let it keep the address it got :-(
Also, if you are in that situation, there is now (I believe) another
option - you can mark a lease as reserved and it will be handled the
same as a dynamic address EXCEPT that it will be kept for use by the
same client and never re-allocated.
--
Simon Hobson
Visit http://www.magpiesnestpublishing.co.uk/ for books by acclaimed
author Gladys Hobson. Novels - poetry - short stories - ideal as
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