Many thanks to those who replied: Matthew Mauzy, Michael Connolly, Marcelino Mata, Hichael Morton, Dave Miner, and a few anonymous yahoo.com users ;) The general consensus is that Win9x/NT are more prone to the DHCP release issue than is Win2K, but that it does still happen albeit less frequently. We have seen that here. This problem occurs whether Windows or UNIX DHCP services are implemented, so it's *got* to be a problem with the Win client. Research we did here shows that Win9x has a registry setting (go figure!) and that NT has a resource kit program that will help. We found no information on how to fix this with Win2K, which only leads us to believe that Microsoft is ignoring the problem. Matthew is running ISC DHCP and has never seen this problem. Dave says that dhcptags in SunOS 5.6 and 5.7 apply only to Solaris and that I should shorten the lease, which I agree may be somewhat helpful. In some DHCP threads a few weeks ago it was summarized that Solaris-8's native DHCP is the way to go and it better that ISC, so I don't know what to believe. I think I'll give the server an OS upgrade to Solaris-8 (9?) and see how it goes. Most everyone has suggested that users run 'ipconfig /release' when needed, but Nobody gave any ideas as to why a client would decline an otherwise good looking IP address enough times to suck up a whole network. I have a feeling that it could be a badly configured wireless bridge or worse -- a do it yourself Linux installation. We are looking into that and when we find an answer I'll post. Thanks again to all. Sal Serafino UNIX Administrator Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory mailto:Sal.Serafino@cshl.edu Original Post: > Hi all- > > We have a [native] dhcp server running on Solaris 7 for use with DHCP clients > running Solaris, IRIX, Linux, Win9x/NT/2K, Mac OS8/9/X and probably some other > stuff too including a few Minix experiments. It serves a lot of config > information and has been running for over two and a half years with no major > complaints from anyone once we ironed out the kinks. However, we have two basic > problems with this platform: > > 1 - WinClients don't like to release their IPs on shutdown. The problem here is > when a laptop moves to a different subnet so that the old IP is not available > and the laptop can't get a new IP in the current subnet. > > I did some research and added a tag per documentation in /etc/dhcp/dhcptags: > 258 DHCPRel - String DHCP_Release_On_Shutdown > And also added a symbol in /var/dhcp/dhcptab: > DHCPRel s Vendor=MSFT,258,ASCII,1,1 > All clients are configured with a macro that includes :DHCPRel=RELEASE: but it > appears to not be working properly. > > 2 - Sometimes, a client will decline a whole pool's worth of addresses in an > entire Class-C subnet for no apparent reason. The IPs offered are not pingable, > so we think there should be no reason to decline. Ultimately, most or all of > the "free" IPs in any DHCP pool will be tagged as unusable and then nobody can > get an IP no matter where they go. _______________________________________________ sunmanagers mailing list sunmanagers@sunmanagers.org http://www.sunmanagers.org/mailman/listinfo/sunmanagersReceived on Thu Aug 1 12:28:23 2002
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