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Working With DHCP in Oracle Solaris 11.1     Oracle Solaris 11.1 Information Library
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Document Information

Preface

1.  About DHCP (Overview)

2.  Administering the ISC DHCP Service

3.  Configuring and Administering the DHCP Client

About the DHCP Client

The DHCP Administrative Model

MAC Address and Client ID

Differences Between DHCPv4 and DHCPv6

DHCP Protocol Details

Logical Interfaces

Option Negotiation

Configuration Syntax

DHCP Client Startup

DHCPv6 Communication

How DHCP Client Protocols Manage Network Configuration Information

How the DHCPv4 Client Manages Network Configuration Information

How the DHCPv6 Client Manages Network Configuration Information

DHCP Client Shutdown

Enabling and Disabling a DHCP Client

How to Enable a DHCP Client

How to Disable a DHCP Client

DHCP Client Administration

ipadm Command Options Used With the DHCP Client

Setting DHCP Client Configuration Parameters

For DHCPv4

For DHCPv4 and DHCPv6

DHCP Client Systems With Multiple Network Interfaces

DHCPv4 Client Host Names

How to Enable a DHCPv4 Client to Request a Specific Host Name

DHCP Client Systems and Name Services

DHCP Client Event Scripts

4.  DHCP Commands and Files (Reference)

Index

Chapter 3

Configuring and Administering the DHCP Client

This chapter discusses the Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol (DHCP) client that is part of Oracle Solaris. The chapter explains how the client's DHCPv4 and DHCPv6 protocols work, and how you can affect the behavior of the client.

One protocol, DHCPv4, has long been part of Oracle Solaris, and enables DHCP servers to pass configuration parameters such as IPv4 network addresses to IPv4 nodes.

The other protocol, DHCPv6, enables DHCP servers to pass configuration parameters such as IPv6 network addresses to IPv6 nodes. DHCPv6 is a stateful counterpart to “IPv6 Stateless Address Autoconfiguration” (RFC 2462), and can be used separately or concurrently with the stateless to obtain configuration parameters.

This chapter contains the following information: