分享
 
 
 

RFC1541 - Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol

王朝other·作者佚名  2008-05-31
窄屏简体版  字體: |||超大  

Network Working Group R. Droms

Request for Comments: 1541 BUCknell University

Obsoletes: 1531 October 1993

Category: Standards Track

Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol

Status of this memo

This RFCspecifies an Internet standards track protocol for the

Internet community, and requests discussion and suggestions for

improvements. Please refer to the current edition of the "Internet

Official Protocol Standards" for the standardization state and status

of this protocol. Distribution of this memo is unlimited.

Abstract

The Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol (DHCP) provides a framework

for passing configuration information to hosts on a TCP/IP network.

DHCP is based on the Bootstrap Protocol (BOOTP) [7], adding the

capability of automatic allocation of reusable network addresses and

additional configuration options [19]. DHCP captures the behavior of

BOOTP relay agents [7, 23], and DHCP participants can interoperate

with BOOTP participants [9]. Due to some errors introduced into RFC

1531 in the editorial process, this memo is reissued as RFC1541.

Table of Contents

1. Introduction. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2

1.1 Related Work. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4

1.2 Problem definition and issues . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4

1.3 Requirements. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5

1.4 Terminology . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6

1.5 Design goals. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6

2. Protocol Summary . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8

2.1 Configuration parameters repository . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10

2.2 Dynamic allocation of network addresses . . . . . . . . . . . 11

3. The Client-Server Protocol . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11

3.1 Client-server interaction - allocating a network address. . . 12

3.2 Client-server interaction - reusing a previously allocated

network address . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17

3.3 Interpretation and representation of time values. . . . . . . 19

3.4 Host parameters in DHCP . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 19

3.5 Use of DHCP in clients with multiple interfaces . . . . . . . 20

3.6 When clients should use DHCP. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20

4. Specification of the DHCP client-server protocol . . . . . . . 21

4.1 Constructing and sending DHCP messages. . . . . . . . . . . . 21

4.2 DHCP server administrative controls . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23

4.3 DHCP server behavior. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 24

4.3.1 DHCPDISCOVER message. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 24

4.3.2 DHCPREQUEST message . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 27

4.3.3 DHCPDECLINE message . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 29

4.3.4 DHCPRELEASE message . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 29

4.4 DHCP client behavior. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 29

4.4.1 Initialization and allocation of network address. . . . . . 29

4.4.2 Initialization with known network address . . . . . . . . . 33

4.4.3 Initialization with a known DHCP server address . . . . . . 34

4.4.4 Reacquisition and eXPiration. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 34

4.4.5 DHCPRELEASE . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 35

5. Acknowledgments. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 35

6. References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 36

7. Security Considerations. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 37

8. Author's Address . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 38

A. Host Configuration Parameters . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 39

List of Figures

1. Format of a DHCP message . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9

2. Format of the 'flags' field. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10

3. Timeline diagram of messages exchanged between DHCP client and

servers when allocating a new network address. . . . . . . . . 15

4. Timeline diagram of messages exchanged between DHCP client and

servers when reusing a previously allocated network address. . 18

5. State-transition diagram for DHCP clients. . . . . . . . . . . 31

List of Tables

1. Description of fields in a DHCP message. . . . . . . . . . . . 14

2. DHCP messages. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16

3. Fields and options used by DHCP servers. . . . . . . . . . . . 25

4. Fields and options used by DHCP clients. . . . . . . . . . . . 32

1. Introduction

The Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol (DHCP) provides configuration

parameters to Internet hosts. DHCP consists of two components: a

protocol for delivering host-specific configuration parameters from a

DHCP server to a host and a mechanism for allocation of network

addresses to hosts.

DHCP is built on a client-server model, where designated DHCP server

hosts allocate network addresses and deliver configuration parameters

to dynamically configured hosts. Throughout the remainder of this

document, the term "server" refers to a host providing initialization

parameters through DHCP, and the term "client" refers to a host

requesting initialization parameters from a DHCP server.

A host should not act as a DHCP server unless explicitly configured

to do so by a system administrator. The diversity of hardware and

protocol implementations in the Internet would preclude reliable

operation if random hosts were allowed to respond to DHCP requests.

For example, IP requires the setting of many parameters within the

protocol implementation software. Because IP can be used on many

dissimilar kinds of network hardware, values for those parameters

cannot be guessed or assumed to have correct defaults. Also,

distributed address allocation schemes depend on a polling/defense

mechanism for discovery of addresses that are already in use. IP

hosts may not always be able to defend their network addresses, so

that such a distributed address allocation scheme cannot be

guaranteed to avoid allocation of duplicate network addresses.

DHCP supports three mechanisms for IP address allocation. In

"automatic allocation", DHCP assigns a permanent IP address to a

host. In "dynamic allocation", DHCP assigns an IP address to a host

for a limited period of time (or until the host explicitly

relinquishes the address). In "manual allocation", a host's IP

address is assigned by the network administrator, and DHCP is used

simply to convey the assigned address to the host. A particular

network will use one or more of these mechanisms, depending on the

policies of the network administrator.

Dynamic allocation is the only one of the three mechanisms that

allows automatic reuse of an address that is no longer needed by the

host to which it was assigned. Thus, dynamic allocation is

particularly useful for assigning an address to a host that will be

connected to the network only temporarily or for sharing a limited

pool of IP addresses among a group of hosts that do not need

permanent IP addresses. Dynamic allocation may also be a good choice

for assigning an IP address to a new host being permanently connected

to a network where IP addresses are sufficiently scarce that it is

important to reclaim them when old hosts are retired. Manual

allocation allows DHCP to be used to eliminate the error-prone

process of manually configuring hosts with IP addresses in

environments where (for whatever reasons) it is desirable to manage

IP address assignment outside of the DHCP mechanisms.

The format of DHCP messages is based on the format of BOOTP messages,

to capture the BOOTP relay agent behavior described as part of the

BOOTP specification [7, 23] and to allow interoperability of existing

BOOTP clients with DHCP servers. Using BOOTP relaying agents

eliminates the necessity of having a DHCP server on each physical

network segment.

1.1 Related Work

There are several Internet protocols and related mechanisms that

address some parts of the dynamic host configuration problem. The

Reverse Address Resolution Protocol (RARP) [10] (through the

extensions defined in the Dynamic RARP (DRARP) [5]) explicitly

addresses the problem of network address discovery, and includes an

automatic IP address assignment mechanism. The Trivial File Transfer

Protocol (TFTP) [20] provides for transport of a boot image from a

boot server. The Internet Control Message Protocol (ICMP) [16]

provides for informing hosts of additional routers via "ICMP

redirect" messages. ICMP also can provide subnet mask information

through the "ICMP mask request" message and other information through

the (obsolete) "ICMP information request" message. Hosts can locate

routers through the ICMP router discovery mechanism [8].

BOOTP is a transport mechanism for a collection of configuration

information. BOOTP is also extensible, and official extensions [17]

have been defined for several configuration parameters. Morgan has

proposed extensions to BOOTP for dynamic IP address assignment [15].

The Network Information Protocol (NIP), used by the Athena project at

MIT, is a distributed mechanism for dynamic IP address assignment

[19]. The Resource Location Protocol RLP [1] provides for location

of higher level services. Sun Microsystems diskless workstations use

a boot procedure that employs RARP, TFTP and an RPC mechanism called

"bootparams" to deliver configuration information and operating

system code to diskless hosts. (Sun Microsystems, Sun Workstation

and SunOS are trademarks of Sun Microsystems, Inc.) Some Sun

networks also use DRARP and an auto-installation mechanism to

automate the configuration of new hosts in an existing network.

In other related work, the path minimum transmission unit (MTU)

discovery algorithm can determine the MTU of an arbitrary internet

path [14]. Comer and Droms have proposed the use of the Address

Resolution Protocol (ARP) as a transport protocol for resource

location and selection [6]. Finally, the Host Requirements RFCs [3,

4] mention specific requirements for host reconfiguration and suggest

a scenario for initial configuration of diskless hosts.

1.2 Problem definition and issues

DHCP is designed to supply hosts with the configuration parameters

defined in the Host Requirements RFCs. After oBTaining parameters

via DHCP, a host should be able to exchange packets with any other

host in the Internet. The parameters supplied by DHCP are listed in

Appendix A.

Not all of these parameters are required for a newly initialized

host. A client and server may negotiate for the transmission of only

those parameters required by the client or specific to a particular

subnet.

DHCP allows but does not require the configuration of host parameters

not directly related to the IP protocol. DHCP also does not address

registration of newly configured hosts with the Domain Name System

(DNS) [12, 13].

DHCP is not intended for use in configuring routers.

1.3 Requirements

Throughout this document, the Words that are used to define the

significance of particular requirements are capitalized. These words

are:

o "MUST"

This word or the adjective "REQUIRED" means that the

item is an absolute requirement of this specification.

o "MUST NOT"

This phrase means that the item is an absolute prohibition

of this specification.

o "SHOULD"

This word or the adjective "RECOMMENDED" means that there

may exist valid reasons in particular circumstances to ignore

this item, but the full implications should be understood and

the case carefully weighed before choosing a different course.

o "SHOULD NOT"

This phrase means that there may exist valid reasons in

particular circumstances when the listed behavior is acceptable

or even useful, but the full implications should be understood

and the case carefully weighed before implementing any behavior

described with this label.

o "MAY"

This word or the adjective "OPTIONAL" means that this item is

truly optional. One vendor may choose to include the item

because a particular marketplace requires it or because it

enhances the product, for example; another vendor may omit the

same item.

1.4 Terminology

This document uses the following terms:

o "DHCP client"

A DHCP client is an Internet host using DHCP to obtain

configuration parameters such as a network address.

o "DHCP server"

A DHCP server is an Internet host that returns configuration

parameters to DHCP clients.

o "BOOTP relay agent"

A BOOTP relay agent is an Internet host or router that passes

DHCP messages between DHCP clients and DHCP servers. DHCP is

designed to use the same relay agent behavior as specified in

the BOOTP protocol specification.

o "binding"

A binding is a collection of configuration parameters, including

at least an IP address, associated with or "bound to" a DHCP

client. Bindings are managed by DHCP servers.

1.5 Design goals

The following list gives general design goals for DHCP.

o DHCP should be a mechanism rather than a policy. DHCP must

allow local system administrators control over configuration

parameters where desired; e.g., local system administrators

should be able to enforce local policies concerning allocation

and Access to local resources where desired.

o Hosts should require no manual configuration. Each host should

be able to discover appropriate local configuration parameters

without user intervention and incorporate those parameters into

its own configuration.

o Networks should require no hand configuration for individual

hosts. Under normal circumstances, the network manager should

not have to enter any per-host configuration parameters.

o DHCP should not require a server on each subnet. To allow for

scale and economy, DHCP must work across routers or through the

intervention of BOOTP/DHCP relay agents.

o A DHCP host must be prepared to receive multiple responses to a

request for configuration parameters. Some installations may

include multiple, overlapping DHCP servers to enhance

reliability and increase performance.

o DHCP must coexist with statically configured, non-participating

hosts and with existing network protocol implementations.

o DHCP must interoperate with the BOOTP relay agent behavior as

described by RFC951 and by Wimer [21].

o DHCP must provide service to existing BOOTP clients.

The following list gives design goals specific to the transmission of

the network layer parameters. DHCP must:

o Guarantee that any specific network address will not be in

use by more than one host at a time,

o Retain host configuration across host reboot. A host should,

whenever possible, be assigned the same configuration parameters

(e.g., network address) in response to each request,

o Retain host configuration across server reboots, and, whenever

possible, a host should be assigned the same configuration

parameters despite restarts of the DHCP mechanism,

o Allow automatic assignment of configuration parameters to new

hosts to avoid hand configuration for new hosts,

o Support fixed or permanent allocation of configuration

parameters to specific hosts.

2. Protocol Summary

From the client's point of view, DHCP is an extension of the BOOTP

mechanism. This behavior allows existing BOOTP clients to

interoperate with DHCP servers without requiring any change to the

clients' initialization software. A separate document details the

interactions between BOOTP and DHCP clients and servers [9]. There

are some new, optional transactions that optimize the interaction

between DHCP clients and servers that are described in sections 3 and

4.

Figure 1 gives the format of a DHCP message and table 1 describes

each of the fields in the DHCP message. The numbers in parentheses

indicate the size of each field in octets. The names for the fields

given in the figure will be used throughout this document to refer to

the fields in DHCP messages.

There are two primary differences between DHCP and BOOTP. First,

DHCP defines mechanisms through which clients can be assigned a

network address for a fixed lease, allowing for serial reassignment

of network addresses to different clients. Second, DHCP provides the

mechanism for a client to acquire all of the IP configuration

parameters that it needs in order to operate.

DHCP introduces a small change in terminology intended to clarify the

meaning of one of the fields. What was the "vendor extensions" field

in BOOTP has been re-named the "options" field in DHCP. Similarly,

the tagged data items that were used inside the BOOTP "vendor

extensions" field, which were formerly referred to as "vendor

extensions," are now termed simply "options."

DHCP defines a new 'client identifier' option that is used to pass an

explicit client identifier to a DHCP server. This change eliminates

the overloading of the 'chaddr' field in BOOTP messages, where

'chaddr' is used both as a hardware address for transmission of BOOTP

reply messages and as a client identifier. The 'client identifier'

option may contain a hardware address, identical to the contents of

the 'chaddr' field, or it may contain another type of identifier,

such as a DNS name. Other client identifier types may be defined as

needed for use with DHCP. New client identifier types will be

registered with the IANA [18] and will be included in new revisions

of the Assigned Numbers document, as well as described in detail in

future revisions of the DHCP Options [2].

0 1 2 3

0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1

+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+

op (1) htype (1) hlen (1) hops (1)

+---------------+---------------+---------------+---------------+

xid (4)

+-------------------------------+-------------------------------+

secs (2) flags (2)

+-------------------------------+-------------------------------+

ciaddr (4)

+---------------------------------------------------------------+

yiaddr (4)

+---------------------------------------------------------------+

siaddr (4)

+---------------------------------------------------------------+

giaddr (4)

+---------------------------------------------------------------+

chaddr (16)

+---------------------------------------------------------------+

sname (64)

+---------------------------------------------------------------+

file (128)

+---------------------------------------------------------------+

options (312)

+---------------------------------------------------------------+

Figure 1: Format of a DHCP message

DHCP clarifies the interpretation of the 'siaddr' field as the

address of the server to use in the next step of the client's

bootstrap process. A DHCP server may return its own address in the

'siaddr' field, if the server is prepared to supply the next

bootstrap service (e.g., delivery of an operating system executable

image). A DHCP server always returns its own address in the 'server

identifier' option.

The options field is now variable length, with the minimum extended

to 312 octets. This brings the minimum size of a DHCP message up to

576 octets, the minimum IP datagram size a host must be prepared to

accept [3]. DHCP clients may negotiate the use of larger DHCP

messages through the 'Maximum DHCP message size' option. The options

field may be further extended into the 'file' and 'sname' fields.

A new option, called 'vendor specific information', has been added to

allow for expansion of the number of options that can be supported

[2]. Options encapsulated as 'vendor specific information' must be

carefully defined and documented so as to allow for interoperability

between clients and servers from diferent vendors. In particular,

vendors defining 'vendor specific information' MUST document those

options in the form of the DHCP Options document, MUST choose to

represent those options either in data types already defined for DHCP

options or in other well-defined data types, and MUST choose options

that can be readily encoded in configuration files for exchange with

servers provided by other vendors. Options included as 'vendor

specific options' MUST be readily supportable by all servers.

1 1 1 1 1 1

0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5

-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+

B MBZ

-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+

B: BROADCAST flag

MBZ: MUST BE ZERO (reserved for future use)

Figure 2: Format of the 'flags' field

DHCP uses the 'flags' field [21]. The leftmost bit is defined as the

BROADCAST (B) flag. The semantics of this flag are discussed in

section 4.1 of this document. The remaining bits of the flags field

are reserved for future use. They MUST be set to zero by clients and

ignored by servers and relay agents. Figure 2 gives the format of

the 'flags' field.

2.1 Configuration parameters repository

The first service provided by DHCP is to provide persistent storage

of network parameters for network clients. The model of DHCP

persistent storage is that the DHCP service stores a key-value entry

for each client, where the key is some unique identifier (for

example, an IP subnet number and a unique identifier within the

subnet) and the value contains the configuration parameters for the

client.

For example, the key might be the pair (IP-subnet-number, hardware-

address), allowing for serial or concurrent reuse of a hardware

address on different subnets, and for hardware addresses that may not

be globally unique. Alternately, the key might be the pair (IP-

subnet-number, hostname), allowing the server to assign parameters

intelligently to a host that has been moved to a different subnet or

has changed hardware addresses (perhaps because the network interface

failed and was replaced).

A client can query the DHCP service to retrieve its configuration

parameters. The client interface to the configuration parameters

repository consists of protocol messages to request configuration

parameters and responses from the server carrying the configuration

parameters.

2.2 Dynamic allocation of network addresses

The second service provided by DHCP is the allocation of temporary or

permanent network (IP) addresses to hosts. The basic mechanism for

the dynamic allocation of network addresses is simple: a client

requests the use of an address for some period of time. The

allocation mechanism (the collection of DHCP servers) guarantees not

to reallocate that address within the requested time and attempts to

return the same network address each time the client requests an

address. In this document, the period over which a network address

is allocated to a client is referred to as a "lease" [11]. The

client may extend its lease with subsequent requests. The client may

issue a message to release the address back to the server when the

client no longer needs the address. The client may ask for a

permanent assignment by aSKINg for an infinite lease. Even when

assigning "permanent" addresses, a server may choose to give out

lengthy but non-infinite leases to allow detection of the fact that

the host has been retired.

In some environments it will be necessary to reassign network

addresses due to exhaustion of available addresses. In such

environments, the allocation mechanism will reuse addresses whose

lease has expired. The server should use whatever information is

available in the configuration information repository to choose an

address to reuse. For example, the server may choose the least

recently assigned address. As a consistency check, the allocation

mechanism may probe the reused address, e.g., with an ICMP echo

request, before allocating the address, and the client will probe the

newly received address, e.g., with ARP.

3. The Client-Server Protocol

DHCP uses the BOOTP message format defined in RFC951 and given in

table 1 and figure 1. The 'op' field of each DHCP message sent from

a client to a server contains BOOTREQUEST. BOOTREPLY is used in the

'op' field of each DHCP message sent from a server to a client.

The first four octets of the 'options' field of the DHCP message

contain the (decimal) values 99, 130, 83 and 99, respectively (this

is the same magic cookie as is defined in RFC1497). The remainder

of the 'options' field consists a list of tagged parameters that are

called "options". All of the "vendor extensions" listed in RFC1497

are also DHCP options. A separate document gives the complete set of

options defined for use with DHCP [2].

Several options have been defined so far. One particular option -

the "DHCP message type" option - must be included in every DHCP

message. This option defines the "type" of the DHCP message.

Additional options may be allowed, required, or not allowed,

depending on the DHCP message type.

Throughout this document, DHCP messages that include a 'DHCP message

type' option will be referred to by the type of the message; e.g., a

DHCP message with 'DHCP message type' option type 1 will be referred

to as a "DHCPDISCOVER" message.

3.1 Client-server interaction - allocating a network address

The following summary of the protocol exchanges between clients and

servers refers to the DHCP messages described in table 2. The

timeline diagram in figure 3 shows the timing relationships in a

typical client-server interaction. If the client already knows its

address, some steps may be omitted; this abbreviated interaction is

described in section 3.2.

1. The client broadcasts a DHCPDISCOVER message on its local physical

subnet. The DHCPDISCOVER message may include options that suggest

values for the network address and lease duration. BOOTP relay

agents may pass the message on to DHCP servers not on the same

physical subnet.

2. Each server may respond with a DHCPOFFER message that includes an

available network address in the 'yiaddr' field (and other

configuration parameters in DHCP options). Servers need not

reserve the offered network address, although the protocol will

work more efficiently if the server avoids allocating the offered

network address to another client. The server unicasts the

DHCPOFFER message to the client (using the DHCP/BOOTP relay agent

if necessary) if possible, or may broadcast the message to a

broadcast address (preferably 255.255.255.255) on the client's

subnet.

3. The client receives one or more DHCPOFFER messages from one or

more servers. The client may choose to wait for multiple

responses. The client chooses one server from which to request

configuration parameters, based on the configuration parameters

offered in the DHCPOFFER messages. The client broadcasts a

DHCPREQUEST message that MUST include the 'server identifier'

option to indicate which server it has selected, and may include

other options specifying desired configuration values. This

DHCPREQUEST message is broadcast and relayed through DHCP/BOOTP

relay agents. To help ensure that any DHCP/BOOTP relay agents

forward the DHCPREQUEST message to the same set of DHCP servers

that received the original DHCPDISCOVER message, the DHCPREQUEST

message must use the same value in the DHCP message header's

'secs' field and be sent to the same IP broadcast address as the

original DHCPDISCOVER message. The client times out and

retransmits the DHCPDISCOVER message if the client receives no

DHCPOFFER messages.

4. The servers receive the DHCPREQUEST broadcast from the client.

Those servers not selected by the DHCPREQUEST message use the

message as notification that the client has declined that server's

offer. The server selected in the DHCPREQUEST message commits the

binding for the client to persistent storage and responds with a

DHCPACK message containing the configuration parameters for the

requesting client. The combination of 'chaddr' and assigned

network address constitute an unique identifier for the client's

lease and are used by both the client and server to identify a

lease referred to in any DHCP messages. The 'yiaddr' field in the

DHCPACK messages is filled in with the selected network address.

If the selected server is unable to satisfy the DHCPREQUEST message

(e.g., the requested network address has been allocated), the

server SHOULD respond with a DHCPNAK message.

A server may choose to mark addresses offered to clients in

DHCPOFFER messages as unavailable. The server should mark an

address offered to a client in a DHCPOFFER message as available if

the server receives no DHCPREQUEST message from that client.

FIELD OCTETS DESCRIPTION

----- ------ -----------

op 1 Message op code / message type.

1 = BOOTREQUEST, 2 = BOOTREPLY

htype 1 Hardware address type, see ARP section in "Assigned

Numbers" RFC; e.g., '1' = 10mb ethernet.

hlen 1 Hardware address length (e.g. '6' for 10mb

ethernet).

hops 1 Client sets to zero, optionally used by relay-agents

when booting via a relay-agent.

xid 4 Transaction ID, a random number chosen by the

client, used by the client and server to associate

messages and responses between a client and a

server.

secs 2 Filled in by client, seconds elapsed since client

started trying to boot.

flags 2 Flags (see figure 2).

ciaddr 4 Client IP address; filled in by client in

DHCPREQUEST if verifying previously allocated

configuration parameters.

yiaddr 4 'your' (client) IP address.

siaddr 4 IP address of next server to use in bootstrap;

returned in DHCPOFFER, DHCPACK and DHCPNAK by

server.

giaddr 4 Relay agent IP address, used in booting via a

relay-agent.

chaddr 16 Client hardware address.

sname 64 Optional server host name, null terminated string.

file 128 Boot file name, null terminated string; "generic"

name or null in DHCPDISCOVER, fully qualified

Directory-path name in DHCPOFFER.

options 312 Optional parameters field. See the options

documents for a list of defined options.

Table 1: Description of fields in a DHCP message

Server Client Server

(not selected) (selected)

v v v

Begins initialization

_____________/\_____________

/ DHCPDISCOVER DHCPDISCOVER

Determines Determines

configuration configuration

\ ____________/

\_________ /DHCPOFFER

DHCPOFFER\ /

\

Collects replies

\

Selects configuration

_____________/\_____________

/ DHCPREQUEST DHCPREQUEST

Commits configuration

_____________/

/ DHCPACK

Initialization complete

. . .

. . .

Graceful shutdown

\_____________

DHCPRELEASE

Discards lease

v v v

Figure 3: Timeline diagram of messages exchanged between DHCP

client and servers when allocating a new network address

Message Use

------- ---

DHCPDISCOVER - Client broadcast to locate available servers.

DHCPOFFER - Server to client in response to DHCPDISCOVER with

offer of configuration parameters.

DHCPREQUEST - Client broadcast to servers requesting offered

parameters from one server and implicitly declining

offers from all others.

DHCPACK - Server to client with configuration parameters,

including committed network address.

DHCPNAK - Server to client refusing request for configuration

parameters (e.g., requested network address already

allocated).

DHCPDECLINE - Client to server indicating configuration parameters

(e.g., network address) invalid.

DHCPRELEASE - Client to server relinquishing network address and

cancelling remaining lease.

Table 2: DHCP messages

5. The client receives the DHCPACK message with configuration

parameters. The client performs a final check on the parameters

(e.g., ARP for allocated network address), and notes the duration

of the lease and the lease identification cookie specified in the

DHCPACK message. At this point, the client is configured. If the

client detects a problem with the parameters in the DHCPACK

message, the client sends a DHCPDECLINE message to the server and

restarts the configuration process. The client should wait a

minimum of ten seconds before restarting the configuration process

to avoid excessive network traffic in case of looping.

If the client receives a DHCPNAK message, the client restarts the

configuration process.

The client times out and retransmits the DHCPREQUEST message if the

client receives neither a DHCPACK or a DHCPNAK message. The client

retransmits the DHCPREQUEST according to the retransmission

algorithm in section 4.1. If the client receives neither a DHCPACK

or a DHCPNAK message after ten retransmissions of the DHCPREQUEST

message, the client reverts to INIT state and restarts the

initialization process. The client SHOULD notify the user that the

initialization process has failed and is restarting.

6. The client may choose to relinquish its lease on a network address

by sending a DHCPRELEASE message to the server. The client

identifies the lease to be released by including its network

address in the 'ciaddr' field and its hardware address in the

'chaddr' field.

3.2 Client-server interaction - reusing a previously allocated network

address

If a client remembers and wishes to reuse a previously allocated

network address (allocated either by DHCP or some means outside the

protocol), a client may choose to omit some of the steps described in

the previous section. The timeline diagram in figure 4 shows the

timing relationships in a typical client-server interaction for a

client reusing a previously allocated network address.

1. The client broadcasts a DHCPREQUEST message on its local subnet.

The DHCPREQUEST message includes the client's network address in

the 'ciaddr' field. DHCP/BOOTP relay agents pass the message on

to DHCP servers not on the same subnet.

2. Servers with knowledge of the client's configuration parameters

respond with a DHCPACK message to the client.

If the client's request is invalid (e.g., the client has moved

to a new subnet), servers may respond with a DHCPNAK message to

the client.

3. The client receives the DHCPACK message with configuration

prameters. The client performs a final check on the parameters

(as in section 3.1), and notes the duration of the lease and

the lease identification cookie specified in the DHCPACK

message. At this point, the client is configured.

If the client detects a problem with the parameters in the

DHCPACK message, the client sends a DHCPDECLINE message to the

server and restarts the configuration process by requesting a

new network address. This action corresponds to the client

moving to the INIT state in the DHCP state diagram, which is

described in section 4.4.

Server Client Server

v v v

Begins

initialization

/\

___________/ \___________

/DHCPREQUEST DHCPREQUEST\

/

Locates Locates

configuration configuration

\ /

\ ___________/

\ / DHCPACK

\_______ /

DHCPACK\

Initialization

complete

\

(Subsequent

DHCPACKS

ignored)

v v v

Figure 4: Timeline diagram of messages exchanged between DHCP

client and servers when reusing a previously allocated

network address

If the client receives a DHCPNAK message, it cannot reuse its

remembered network address. It must instead request a new

address by restarting the configuration process, this time

using the (non-abbreviated) procedure described in section

3.1. This action also corresponds to the client moving to

the INIT state in the DHCP state diagram.

The client times out and retransmits the DHCPREQUEST message if

the client receives neither a DHCPACK nor a DHCPNAK message.

The time between retransmission MUST be chosen according to

the algorithm given in section 4.1. If the client receives no

answer after transmitting 4 DHCPREQUEST messages, the client

MAY choose to use the previously allocated network address and

configuration parameters for the remainder of the unexpired

lease. This corresponds to moving to BOUND state in the client

state transition diagram shown in figure 5.

4. The client may choose to relinquish its lease on a network

address by sending a DHCPRELEASE message to the server. The

client identifies the lease to be released with the lease

identification cookie.

Note that in this case, where the client retains its network

address locally, the client will not normally relinquish its

lease during a graceful shutdown. Only in the case where the

client explicitly needs to relinquish its lease, e.g., the client

is about to be moved to a different subnet, will the client send

a DHCPRELEASE message.

3.3 Interpretation and representation of time values

A client acquires a lease for a network address for a fixed period of

time (which may be infinite). Throughout the protocol, times are to

be represented in units of seconds. The time value of 0xffffffff is

reserved to represent "infinity". The minimum lease duration is one

hour.

As clients and servers may not have synchronized clocks, times are

represented in DHCP messages as relative times, to be interpreted

with respect to the client's local clock. Representing relative

times in units of seconds in an unsigned 32 bit word gives a range of

relative times from 0 to approximately 100 years, which is sufficient

for the relative times to be measured using DHCP.

The algorithm for lease duration interpretation given in the previous

paragraph assumes that client and server clocks are stable relative

to each other. If there is drift between the two clocks, the server

may consider the lease expired before the client does. To

compensate, the server may return a shorter lease duration to the

client than the server commits to its local database of client

information.

3.4 Host parameters in DHCP

Not all clients require initialization of all parameters listed in

Appendix A. Two techniques are used to reduce the number of

parameters transmitted from the server to the client. First, most of

the parameters have defaults defined in the Host Requirements RFCs;

if the client receives no parameters from the server that override

the defaults, a client uses those default values. Second, in its

initial DHCPDISCOVER or DHCPREQUEST message, a client may provide the

server with a list of specific parameters the client is interested

in.

The client SHOULD include the 'maximum DHCP message size' option to

let the server know how large the server may make its DHCP messages.

The parameters returned to a client may still exceed the space

allocated to options in a DHCP message. In this case, two additional

options flags (which must appear in the 'options' field of the

message) indicate that the 'file' and 'sname' fields are to be used

for options.

The client can inform the server which configuration parameters the

client is interested in by including the 'parameter request list'

option. The data portion of this option explicitly lists the options

requested by tag number.

In addition, the client may suggest values for the network address

and lease time in the DHCPDISCOVER message. The client may include

the 'requested IP address' option to suggest that a particular IP

address be assigned, and may include the 'IP address lease time'

option to suggest the lease time it would like. No other options

representing "hints" at configuration parameters are allowed in a

DHCPDISCOVER or DHCPREQUEST message. The 'ciaddr' field is to be

filled in only in a DHCPREQUEST message when the client is requesting

use of a previously allocated IP address.

If a server receives a DHCPREQUEST message with an invalid 'ciaddr',

the server SHOULD respond to the client with a DHCPNAK message and

may choose to report the problem to the system administrator. The

server may include an error message in the 'message' option.

3.5 Use of DHCP in clients with multiple interfaces

A host with multiple network interfaces must use DHCP through each

interface independently to obtain configuration information

parameters for those separate interfaces.

3.6 When clients should use DHCP

A host should use DHCP to reacquire or verify its IP address and

network parameters whenever the local network parameters may have

changed; e.g., at system boot time or after a disconnection from the

local network, as the local network configuration may change without

the host's or user's knowledge.

If a host has knowledge of a previous network address and is unable

to contact a local DHCP server, the host may continue to use the

previous network address until the lease for that address expires.

If the lease expires before the host can contact a DHCP server, the

host must immediately discontinue use of the previous network address

and may inform local users of the problem.

4. Specification of the DHCP client-server protocol

In this section, we assume that a DHCP server has a block of network

addresses from which it can satisfy requests for new addresses. Each

server also maintains a database of allocated addresses and leases in

local permanent storage.

4.1 Constructing and sending DHCP messages

DHCP clients and servers both construct DHCP messages by filling in

fields in the fixed format section of the message and appending

tagged data items in the variable length option area. The options

area includes first a four-octet 'magic cookie' (which was described

in section 3), followed by the options. The last option must always

be the 'end' option.

DHCP uses UDP as its transport protocol. DHCP messages from a client

to a server are sent to the 'DHCP server' port (67), and DHCP

messages from a server to a client are sent to the 'DHCP client' port

(68).

DHCP messages broadcast by a client prior to that client obtaining

its IP address must have the source address field in the IP header

set to 0.

If the 'giaddr' field in a DHCP message from a client is non-zero,

the server sends any return messages to the 'DHCP server' port on the

DHCP relaying agent whose address appears in 'giaddr'. If the

'giaddr' field is zero, the client is on the same subnet, and the

server sends any return messages to either the client's network

address, if that address was supplied in the 'ciaddr' field, or to

the client's hardware address or to the local subnet broadcast

address.

If the options in a DHCP message extend into the 'sname' and 'file'

fields, the 'option overload' option MUST appear in the 'options'

field, with value 1, 2 or 3, as specified in the DHCP options

document [2]. If the 'option overload' option is present in the

'options' field, the options in the 'options' field MUST be

terminated by an 'end' option, and MAY contain one or more 'pad'

options to fill the options field. The options in the 'sname' and

'file' fields (if in use as indicated by the 'options overload'

option) MUST begin with the first octet of the field, MUST be

terminated by an 'end' option, and MUST be followed by 'pad' options

to fill the remainder of the field. Any individual option in the

'options', 'sname' and 'file' fields MUST be entirely contained in

that field. The options in the 'options' field MUST be interpreted

first, so that any 'option overload' options may be interpreted. The

'file' field MUST be interpreted next (if the 'option overload'

option indicates that the 'file' field contains DHCP options),

followed by the 'sname' field.

DHCP clients are responsible for all message retransmission. The

client MUST adopt a retransmission strategy that incorporates a

randomized exponential bacKOFf algorithm to determine the delay

between retransmissions. The delay before the first retransmission

MUST be 4 seconds randomized by the value of a uniform random number

chosen from the range -1 to +1. Clients with clocks that provide

resolution granularity of less than one second may choose a non-

integer randomization value. The delay before the next

retransmission MUST be 8 seconds randomized by the value of a uniform

number chosen from the range -1 to +1. The retransmission delay MUST

be doubled with subsequent retransmissions up to a maximum of 64

seconds. The client MAY provide an indication of retransmission

attempts to the user as an indication of the progress of the

configuration process. The protocol specification in the remainder

of this section will describe, for each DHCP message, when it is

appropriate for the client to retransmit that message forever, and

when it is appropriate for a client to abandon that message and

attempt to use a different DHCP message.

Normally, DHCP servers and BOOTP relay agents attempt to deliver

DHCPOFFER, DHCPACK and DHCPNAK messages directly to the client using

unicast delivery. The IP destination address (in the IP header) is

set to the DHCP 'yiaddr' address and the link-layer destination

address is set to the DHCP 'chaddr' address. Unfortunately, some

client implementations are unable to receive such unicast IP

datagrams until the implementation has been configured with a valid

IP address (leading to a deadlock in which the client's IP address

cannot be delivered until the client has been configured with an IP

address).

A client that cannot receive unicast IP datagrams until its protocol

software has been configured with an IP address SHOULD set the

BROADCAST bit in the 'flags' field to 1 in any DHCPDISCOVER or

DHCPREQUEST messages that client sends. The BROADCAST bit will

provide a hint to the DHCP server and BOOTP relay agent to broadcast

any messages to the client on the client's subnet. A client that can

receive unicast IP datagrams before its protocol software has been

configured SHOULD clear the BROADCAST bit to 0. The BOOTP

clarifications document discusses the ramifications of the use of the

BROADCAST bit [21].

A server or relay agent sending or relaying a DHCP message directly

to a DHCP client (i.e., not to a relay agent specified in the

'giaddr' field) SHOULD examine the BROADCAST bit in the 'flags'

field. If this bit is set to 1, the DHCP message SHOULD be sent as

an IP broadcast using an IP broadcast address (preferably

255.255.255.255) as the IP destination address and the link-layer

broadcast address as the link-layer destination address. If the

BROADCAST bit is cleared to 0, the message SHOULD be sent as an IP

unicast to the IP address specified in the 'yiaddr' field and the

link-layer address specified in the 'chaddr' field. If unicasting is

not possible, the message MAY be sent as an IP broadcast using an IP

broadcast address (preferably 255.255.255.255) as the IP destination

address and the link-layer broadcast address as the link-layer

destination address.

4.2 DHCP server administrative controls

DHCP servers are not required to respond to every DHCPDISCOVER and

DHCPREQUEST message they receive. For example, a network

administrator, to retain stringent control over the hosts attached to

the network, may choose to configure DHCP servers to respond only to

hosts that have been previously registered through some external

mechanism. The DHCP specification describes only the interactions

between clients and servers when the clients and servers choose to

interact; it is beyond the scope of the DHCP specification to

describe all of the administrative controls that system

administrators might want to use. Specific DHCP server

implementations may incorporate any controls or policies desired by a

network administrator.

In some environments, a DHCP server will have to consider the values

of the 'chaddr' field and/or the 'class-identifier' option included

in the DHCPDISCOVER or DHCPREQUEST messages when determining the

correct parameters for a particular client. For example, an

organization might have a separate bootstrap server for each type of

client it uses, requiring the DHCP server to examine the 'class-

identifier' to determine which bootstrap server address to return in

the 'siaddr' field of a DHCPOFFER or DHCPACK message.

A DHCP server must use some unique identifier to associate a client

with its lease. The client may choose to explicitly provide the

identifier through the 'client identifier' option. If the client

does not provide a 'client identifier' option, the server MUST use

the contents of the 'chaddr' field to identify the client.

DHCP clients are free to use any strategy in selecting a DHCP server

among those from which the client receives a DHCPOFFER message. The

client implementation of DHCP should provide a mechanism for the user

to select directly the 'class-identifier' value.

4.3 DHCP server behavior

A DHCP server processes incoming DHCP messages from a client based on

the current state of the binding for that client. A DHCP server can

receive the following messages from a client:

o DHCPDISCOVER

o DHCPREQUEST

o DHCPDECLINE

o DHCPRELEASE

Table 3 gives the use of the fields and options in a DHCP message by

a server. The remainder of this section describes the action of the

DHCP server for each possible incoming message.

4.3.1 DHCPDISCOVER message

When a server receives a DHCPDISCOVER message from a client, the

server chooses a network address for the requesting client. If no

address is available, the server may choose to report the problem to

the system administrator and may choose to reply to the client with a

DHCPNAK message. If the server chooses to respond to the client, it

may include an error message in the 'message' option. If an address

is available, the new address should be chosen as follows:

o The client's previous address as recorded in the client's binding,

if that address is in the server's pool of available addresses and

not already allocated, else

o The address requested in the 'Requested IP Address' option, if that

address is valid and not already allocated, else

o A new address allocated from the server's pool of available

addresses.

Field DHCPOFFER DHCPACK DHCPNAK

----- --------- ------- -------

'op' BOOTREPLY BOOTREPLY BOOTREPLY

'htype' (From "Assigned Numbers" RFC)

'hlen' (Hardware address length in octets)

'hops' 0 0 0

'xid' 'xid' from client 'xid' from client 'xid' from client

DHCPDISCOVER DHCPREQUEST DHCPREQUEST

message message message

'secs' 0 0 0

'ciaddr' 0 'ciaddr' from 'ciaddr' from

DHCPREQUEST or 0 DHCPREQUEST or 0

'yiaddr' IP address offered IP address 0

to client assigned to client

'siaddr' IP address of next IP address of next 0

bootstrap server bootstrap server

'flags' if 'giaddr' is not 0 then 'flags' from client message else 0

'giaddr' 0 0 0

'chaddr' 'chaddr' from 'chaddr' from 'chaddr' from

client client DHCPREQUEST client DHCPREQUEST

DHCPDISCOVER message message

message

'sname' Server host name Server host name (unused)

or options or options

'file' Client boot file Client boot file (unused)

name or options name or options

'options' options options

Option DHCPOFFER DHCPACK DHCPNAK

------ --------- ------- -------

Requested IP address MUST NOT MUST NOT MUST NOT

IP address lease time MUST MUST MUST NOT

Use 'file'/'sname' MAY MAY MUST NOT

fields

DHCP message type DHCPOFFER DHCPACK DHCPNAK

Parameter request list MUST NOT MUST NOT MUST NOT

Message SHOULD SHOULD SHOULD

Client identifier MUST NOT MUST NOT MUST NOT

Class identifier MUST NOT MUST NOT MUST NOT

Server identifier MUST MAY MAY

Maximum message size MUST NOT MUST NOT MUST NOT

All others MAY MAY MUST NOT

Table 3: Fields and options used by DHCP servers

As described in section 4.2, a server MAY, for administrative

reasons, assign an address other than the one requested, or may

refuse to allocate an address to a particular client even though free

addresses are available.

While not required for correct operation of DHCP, the server should

not reuse the selected network address before the client responds to

the server's DHCPOFFER message. The server may choose to record the

address as offered to the client.

The server must also choose an expiration time for the lease, as

follows:

o IF the client has not requested a specific lease in the

DHCPDISCOVER message and the client already has an assigned network

address, the server returns the lease expiration time previously

assigned to that address (note that the client must explicitly

request a specific lease to extend the expiration time on a

previously assigned address), ELSE

o IF the client has not requested a specific lease in the

DHCPDISCOVER message and the client does not have an assigned

network address, the server assigns a locally configured default

lease time, ELSE

o IF the client has requested a specific lease in the DHCPDISCOVER

message (regardless of whether the client has an assigned network

address), the server may choose either to return the requested

lease (if the lease is acceptable to local policy) or select

another lease.

Once the network address and lease have been determined, the server

constructs a DHCPOFFER message with the offered configuration

parameters. It is important for all DHCP servers to return the same

parameters (with the possible exception of a newly allocated network

address) to ensure predictable host behavior regardless of the which

server the client selects. The configuration parameters MUST be

selected by applying the following rules in the order given below.

The network administrator is responsible for configuring multiple

DHCP servers to ensure uniform responses from those servers. The

server MUST return to the client:

o The client's network address, as determined by the rules given

earlier in this section, and the subnet mask for the network to

which the client is connected,

o The expiration time for the client's lease, as determined by the

rules given earlier in this section,

o Parameters requested by the client, according to the following

rules:

-- IF the server has been explicitly configured with a default

value for the parameter, the server MUST include that value

in an appropriate option in the 'option' field, ELSE

-- IF the server recognizes the parameter as a parameter

defined in the Host Requirements Document, the server MUST

include the default value for that parameter as given in the

Host Requirements Document in an appropriate option in the

'option' field, ELSE

-- The server MUST NOT return a value for that parameter,

o Any parameters from the existing binding that differ from the Host

Requirements documents defaults,

o Any parameters specific to this client (as identified by

the contents of 'chaddr' in the DHCPDISCOVER or DHCPREQUEST

message), e.g., as configured by the network administrator,

o Any parameters specific to this client's class (as identified

by the contents of the 'class identifier' option in the

DHCPDISCOVER or DHCPREQUEST message), e.g., as configured by

the network administrator; the parameters MUST be identified

by an exact match between the client's 'client class' and the

client class identified in the server,

o Parameters with non-default values on the client's subnet.

The server inserts the 'xid' field from the DHCPDISCOVER message into

the 'xid' field of the DHCPOFFER message and sends the DHCPOFFER

message to the requesting client.

4.3.2 DHCPREQUEST message

A DHCPREQUEST message may come from a client responding to a

DHCPOFFER message from a server, or from a client verifying a

previously allocated IP address. If the DHCPREQUEST message contains

a 'server identifier' option, the message is in response to a

DHCPOFFER message. Otherwise, the message is a request to renew or

extend an existing lease.

Consider first the case of a DHCPREQUEST message in response to a

DHCPOFFER message. If the server is identified in the 'server

identifier' option in the DHCPREQUEST message, the server checks to

confirm that the requested parameters are acceptable. Usually, the

requested parameters will match those returned to the client in the

DHCPOFFER message; however, the client may choose to request a

different lease duration. Also, there is no requirement that the

server cache the parameters from the DHCPOFFER message. The server

must simply check that the parameters requested in the DHCPREQUEST

are acceptable. If the parameters are acceptable, the server records

the new client binding and returns a DHCPACK message to the client.

If the requested parameters are unacceptable, e.g., the requested

lease time is unacceptable to local policy, the server sends a

DHCPNAK message to the client. The server may choose to return an

error message in the 'message' option.

If a different server is identified in the 'server identifier' field,

the client has selected a different server from which to obtain

configuration parameters. The server may discard any information it

may have cached about the client's request, and may free the network

address that it had offered to the client.

Note that the client may choose to collect several DHCPOFFER messages

and select the "best" offer. The client indicates its selection by

identifying the offering server in the DHCPREQUEST message. If the

client receives no acceptable offers, the client may choose to try

another DHCPDISCOVER message. Therefore, the servers may not receive

a specific DHCPREQUEST from which they can decide whether or not the

client has accepted the offer. Because the servers have not

committed any network address assignments on the basis of a

DHCPOFFER, servers are free to reuse offered network addresses in

response to subsequent requests. As an implementation detail,

servers should not reuse offered addresses and may use an

implementation-specific timeout mechanism to decide when to reuse an

offered address.

In the second case, when there is no 'server identifier' option, the

client is renewing or extending a previously allocated IP address.

The server checks to confirm that the requested parameters are

acceptable. If the parameters specified in the DHCPREQUEST message

match the previous parameters, or if the request for an extension of

the lease (indicated by an extended 'IP address lease time' option)

is acceptable, the server returns a DHCPACK message to the requesting

client. Otherwise, the server returns a DHCPNAK message to the

client. In particular, if the previously allocated network address

in the 'ciaddr' field from the client does not match the network

address recorded by the server for that client, the server sends a

DHCPNAK to the client.

A DHCP server chooses the parameters to return in a DHCPACK message

according to the same rules as used in constructing a DHCPOFFER

message, as given in section 4.3.1.

4.3.3 DHCPDECLINE message

If the server receives a DHCPDECLINE message, the client has

discovered through some other means that the suggested network

address is already in use. The server MUST mark the network address

as not allocated and SHOULD notify the local system administrator of

a possible configuration problem.

4.3.4 DHCPRELEASE message

Upon receipt of a DHCPRELEASE message, the server marks the network

address as not allocated. The server should retain a record of the

client's initialization parameters for possible reuse in response to

subsequent requests from the client.

4.4 DHCP client behavior

Figure 5 gives a state-transition diagram for a DHCP client. A

client can receive the following messages from a server:

o DHCPOFFER

o DHCPACK

o DHCPNAK

Table 4 gives the use of the fields and options in a DHCP message by

a client. The remainder of this section describes the action of the

DHCP client for each possible incoming message. The description in

the following section corresponds to the full configuration procedure

previously described in section 3.1, and the text in the subsequent

section corresponds to the abbreviated configuration procedure

described in section 3.2.

4.4.1 Initialization and allocation of network address

The client begins in INIT state and forms a DHCPDISCOVER message.

The client should wait a random time between one and ten seconds to

desynchronize the use of DHCP at startup. The client sets 'ciaddr'

to 0x00000000. The client MAY request specific parameters by

including the 'parameter request list' option. The client MAY

suggest a network address and/or lease time by including the

'requested IP address' and 'IP address lease time' options. The

client MUST include its hardware address in the 'chaddr' field for

use in delivery of DHCP reply messages. The client MAY include a

different unique identifier in the 'client identifier' option. If

the client does not include the 'client identifier' option, the

server will use the contents of the 'chaddr' field to identify the

client's lease.

The client generates and records a random transaction identifier and

inserts that identifier into the 'xid' field. The client records its

own local time for later use in computing the lease expiration. The

client then broadcasts the DHCPDISCOVER on the local hardware

broadcast address to 0xffffffff IP broadcast address and 'DHCP

server' UDP port.

If the 'xid' of an arriving DHCPOFFER message does not match the

'xid' of the most recent DHCPDISCOVER message, the DHCPOFFER message

must be silently discarded. Any arriving DHCPACK messages must be

silently discarded.

The client collects DHCPOFFER messages over a period of time, selects

one DHCPOFFER message from the (possibly many) incoming DHCPOFFER

messages (e.g., the first DHCPOFFER message or the DHCPOFFER message

from the previously used server) and extracts the server address from

the 'server identifier' option in the DHCPOFFER message. The time

over which the client collects messages and the mechanism used to

select one DHCPOFFER are implementation dependent. The client may

perform a check on the suggested address to ensure that the address

is not already in use. For example, if the client is on a network

that supports ARP, the client may issue an ARP request for the

suggested request. When broadcasting an ARP request for the

suggested address, the client must fill in its own hardware address

as the sender's hardware address, and 0 as the sender's IP address,

to avoid confusing ARP caches in other hosts on the same subnet. If

the network address appears to be in use, the client sends a

DHCPDECLINE message to the server and waits for another DHCPOFFER. As

the client does not have a valid network address, the client must

broadcast the DHCPDECLINE message.

-------- -------

+--------------------------> <-------------------+

INIT/ +--------------------> INIT

REBOOT DHCPNAK/ +----------> <---+

Restart -------

-------- DHCPNAK/

Discard offer -/Send DHCPDISCOVER

-/Send DHCPREQUEST

DHCPACK v

----------- (not accept.)/ -----------

Send DHCPDECLINE

REBOOTING SELECTING

/

----------- / -----------

/

DHCPACK/ / +----------------+

Record lease, v

set timers ------------

+-----> DHCPNAK, Lease expired/

REQUESTING Halt network

DHCPOFFER/

Discard ------------

-----------

+--------+ DHCPACK/

Record lease, set ----- REBINDING

timers T1, T2 /

DHCPACK/ -----------

v Record lease, set ^

+----------------> ------- /Timers T1,T2

+-----> <---+

BOUND <---+

DHCPOFFER, DHCPACK, T2 expires/ DHCPNAK/

DHCPNAK/Discard ------- Broadcast Halt network

DHCPREQUEST

+-------+ DHCPACK/

T1 expires/ Record lease, set

Send DHCPREQUEST timers T1, T2

to leasing server

----------

------------+

+-> RENEWING

----------------------------+

----------

Figure 5: State-transition diagram for DHCP clients

Field DHCPDISCOVER DHCPREQUEST DHCPDECLINE,

DHCPRELEASE

----- ------------ ----------- -----------

'op' BOOTREQUEST BOOTREQUEST BOOTREQUEST

'htype' (From "Assigned Numbers" RFC)

'hlen' (Hardware address length in octets)

'hops' 0 0 0

'xid' selected by client selected by client selected by

client

'secs' (opt.) (opt.) 0

'flags' Set 'BROADCAST' Set 'BROADCAST'

flag if client flag if client

requires broadcast requires broadcast

reply reply

0

'ciaddr' 0 previously ciaddr

allocated newtork

address

'yiaddr' 0 0 0

'siaddr' 0 0 0

'giaddr' 0 0 0

'chaddr' client's hardware client's hardware client's

hardware

address address address

'sname' options, if options, if (unused)

indicated in indicated in

'sname/file' 'sname/file'

option; otherwise option; otherwise

unused unused

'file' options, if options, if (unused)

indicated in indicated in

'sname/file' 'sname/file'

option; otherwise option; otherwise

'generic' name or 'generic' name or

null null

'options' options options (unused)

Option DHCPDISCOVER DHCPREQUEST DHCPDECLINE,

DHCPRELEASE

------ ------------ ----------- -----------

Requested IP address MAY MUST NOT MUST NOT

IP address lease time MAY MAY MUST NOT

Use 'file'/'sname' fields MAY MAY MAY

DHCP message type DHCPDISCOVER DHCPREQUEST DHCPDECLINE/

DHCPRELEASE

Client identifier MAY MAY MAY

Class identifier SHOULD SHOULD MUST NOT

Server identifier MUST NOT MUST (after MUST

DHCPDISCOVER),

MUST NOT (when

renewing)

Parameter request list MAY MAY MUST NOT

Maximum message size MAY MAY MUST NOT

Message SHOULD NOT SHOULD NOT SHOULD

Site-specific MAY MAY MUST NOT

All others MUST NOT MUST NOT MUST NOT

Table 4: Fields and options used by DHCP clients

If the parameters are acceptable, the client records the address of

the server that supplied the parameters from the 'server identifier'

field and sends that address in the 'server identifier' field of a

DHCPREQUEST broadcast message. Once the DHCPACK message from the

server arrives, the client is initialized and moves to BOUND state.

The DHCPREQUEST message contains the same 'xid' as the DHCPOFFER

message. The client records the lease expiration time as the sum of

the time at which the original request was sent and the duration of

the lease from the DHCPOFFER message. The client SHOULD broadcast an

ARP reply to announce the client's new IP address and clear any

outdated ARP cache entries in hosts on the client's subnet.

4.4.2 Initialization with known network address

The client begins in INIT-REBOOT state and sends a DHCPREQUEST message

with the 'ciaddr' field set to the client's network address. The

client may request specific configuration parameters by including

the 'parameter request list' option. The client generates and records a

random transaction identifier and inserts that identifier into the 'xid'

field. The client records its own local time for later use in

computing the lease expiration. The client MUST NOT incldue a 'server

identifier' in the DHCPREQUEST message. The client then broadcasts

the DHCPREQUEST on the local hardware broadcast address to the 'DHCP

server' UDP port.

Once a DHCPACK message with an 'xid' field matching that in the

client's DHCPREQUEST message arrives from any server, the client is

initialized and moves to BOUND state. The client records the lease

expiration time as the sum of the time at which the DHCPREQUEST

message was sent and the duration of the lease from the DHCPACK

message.

4.4.3 Initialization with a known DHCP server address

When the DHCP client knows the address of a DHCP server, in either

INIT or REBOOTING state, the client may use that address in the

DHCPDISCOVER or DHCPREQUEST rather than the IP broadcast address. If

the client receives no response to DHCP messages sent to the IP

address of a known DHCP server, the DHCP client reverts to using the

IP broadcast address.

4.4.4 Reacquisition and expiration

The client maintains two times, T1 and T2, that specify the times at

which the client tries to extend its lease on its network address. T1

is the time at which the client enters the RENEWING state and attempts

to contact the server that originally issued the client's network

address. T2 is the time at which the client enters the REBINDING

state and attempts to contact any server.

At time T1 after the client accepts the lease on its network address,

the client moves to RENEWING state and sends (via unicast) a

DHCPREQUEST message to the server to extend its lease. The client

generates a random transaction identifier and inserts that identifier

into the 'xid' field in the DHCPREQUEST. The client records the local

time at which the DHCPREQUEST message is sent for computation of the

lease expiration time. The client MUST NOT include a 'server

identifier' in the DHCPREQUEST message.

Any DHCPACK messages that arrive with an 'xid' that does not match

the 'xid' of the client's DHCPREQUEST message are silently discarded.

When the client receives a DHCPACK from the server, the client

computes the lease expiration time as the sum of the time at which the

client sent the DHCPREQUEST message and the duration of the lease in

the DHCPACK message. The client has successfully reacquired its

network address, returns to BOUND state and may continue network

processing.

If no DHCPACK arrives before time T2 (T2 > T1) before the expiration

of the client's lease on its network address, the client moves to

REBINDING state and sends (via broadcast) a DHCPREQUEST message to

extend its lease. The client sets the 'ciaddr' field in the

DHCPREQUEST to its current network address. The client MUST NOT

include a 'server identifier' in the DHCPREQUEST message.

Times T1 and T2 are configurable by the server through options. T1

defaults to (0.5 * duration_of_lease). T2 defaults to (0.875 *

duration_of_lease). Times T1 and T2 should be chosen with some random

"fuzz" around a fixed value, to avoid synchronization of client

reacquisition.

In both RENEWING and REBINDING state, if the client receives no

response to its DHCPREQUEST message, the client should wait one-half

the remaining time until the expiration of T1 (in RENEWING state) and

T2 (in REBINDING state) down to a minimum of 60 seconds, before

retransmitting the DHCPREQUEST message.

If the lease expires before the client receives a DHCPACK, the client

moves to INIT state, MUST immediately stop any other network

processing and requests network initialization parameters as if the

client were uninitialized. If the client then receives a DHCPACK

allocating that client its previous network address, the client SHOULD

continue network processing. If the client is given a new network

address, it MUST NOT continue using the previous network address and

SHOULD notify the local users of the problem.

4.4.5 DHCPRELEASE

If the client no longer requires use of its assigned network address

(e.g., the client is gracefully shut down), the client sends a

DHCPRELEASE message to the server. Note that the correct operation of

DHCP does not depend on the transmission of DHCPRELEASE messages.

5. Acknowledgments

Greg Minshall, Leo McLaughlin and John Veizades have patiently

contributed to the the design of DHCP through innumerable discussions,

meetings and mail conversations. Jeff Mogul first proposed the

client-server based model for DHCP. Steve Deering searched the

various IP RFCs to put together the list of network parameters

supplied by DHCP. Walt Wimer contributed a wealth of practical

experience with BOOTP and wrote a document clarifying the behavior of

BOOTP/DHCP relay agents. Jesse Walker analyzed DHCP in detail,

pointing out several inconsistencies in earlier specifications of the

protocol. Steve Alexander reviewed Walker's analysis and the fixes to

the protocol based on Walker's work. And, of course, all the members

of the Dynamic Host Configuration Working Group of the IETF have

contributed to the design of the protocol through discussion and

review of the protocol design.

6. References

[1] Acetta, M., "Resource Location Protocol", RFC887, CMU, December

1983.

[2] Alexander, S., and R. Droms, "DHCP Options and BOOTP Vendor

Extensions", RFC1533, Lachman Technology, Inc., Bucknell

University, October 1993.

[3] Braden, R., Editor, "Requirements for Internet Hosts --

Communication Layers", STD 3, RFC1122, USC/Information Sciences

Institute, October 1989.

[4] Braden, R., Editor, "Requirements for Internet Hosts --

Application and Support, STD 3, RFC1123, USC/Information

Sciences Institute, October 1989.

[5] Brownell, D, "Dynamic Reverse Address Resolution Protocol

(DRARP)", Work in Progress.

[6] Comer, D., and R. Droms, "Uniform Access to Internet Directory

Services", Proc. of ACM SIGCOMM '90 (Special issue of Computer

Communications Review), 20(4):50--59, 1990.

[7] Croft, B., and J. Gilmore, "Bootstrap Protocol (BOOTP)", RFC951,

Stanford and SUN Microsystems, September 1985.

[8] Deering, S., "ICMP Router Discovery Messages", RFC1256, Xerox

PARC, September 1991.

[9] Droms, D., "Interoperation between DHCP an BOOTP" RFC1534,

Bucknell University, October 1993.

[10] Finlayson, R., Mann, T., Mogul, J., and M. Theimer, "A Reverse

Address Resolution Protocol", RFC903, Stanford, June 1984.

[11] Gray C., and D. Cheriton, "Leases: An Efficient Fault-Tolerant

Mechanism for Distributed File Cache Consistency", In Proc. of

the Twelfth ACM Symposium on Operating Systems Design, 1989.

[12] Mockapetris, P., "Domain Names -- Concepts and Facilities", STD

13, RFC1034, USC/Information Sciences Institute, November 1987.

[13] Mockapetris, P., "Domain Names -- Implementation and

Specification", STD 13, RFC1035, USC/Information Sciences

Institute, November 1987.

[14] Mogul J., and S. Deering, "Path MTU Discovery", RFC1191,

November 1990.

[15] Morgan, R., "Dynamic IP Address Assignment for Ethernet Attached

Hosts", Work in Progress.

[16] Postel, J., "Internet Control Message Protocol", STD 5, RFC792,

USC/Information Sciences Institute, September 1981.

[17] Reynolds, J., "BOOTP Vendor Information Extensions", RFC1497,

USC/Information Sciences Institute, August 1993.

[18] Reynolds, J., and J. Postel, "Assigned Numbers", STD 2, RFC1340,

USC/Information Sciences Institute, July 1992.

[19] Jeffrey Schiller and Mark Rosenstein. A Protocol for the Dynamic

Assignment of IP Addresses for use on an Ethernet. (Available

from the Athena Project, MIT), 1989.

[20] Sollins, K., "The TFTP Protocol (Revision 2)", RFC783, NIC,

June 1981.

[21] Wimer, W., "Clarifications and Extensions for the Bootstrap

Protocol", RFC1542, Carnegie Mellon University, October 1993.

7. Security Considerations

DHCP is built directly on UDP and IP which are as yet inherently

insecure. Furthermore, DHCP is generally intended to make

maintenance of remote and/or diskless hosts easier. While perhaps

not impossible, configuring such hosts with passwords or keys may be

difficult and inconvenient. Therefore, DHCP in its current form is

quite insecure.

Unauthorized DHCP servers may be easily set up. Such servers can

then send false and potentially disruptive information to clients

such as incorrect or duplicate IP addresses, incorrect routing

information (including spoof routers, etc.), incorrect domain

nameserver addresses (such as spoof nameservers), and so on.

Clearly, once this seed information is in place, an attacker can

further compromise affected systems.

Malicious DHCP clients could masquerade as legitimate clients and

retrieve information intended for those legitimate clients. Where

dynamic allocation of resources is used, a malicious client could

claim all resources for itself, thereby denying resources to

legitimate clients.

8. Author's Address

Ralph Droms

Computer Science Department

323 Dana Engineering

Bucknell University

Lewisburg, PA 17837

Phone: (717) 524-1145

EMail: droms@bucknell.edu

A. Host Configuration Parameters

IP-layer_parameters,_per_host:_

Be a router on/off HRC 3.1

Non-local source routing on/off HRC 3.3.5

Policy filters for

non-local source routing (list) HRC 3.3.5

Maximum reassembly size integer HRC 3.3.2

Default TTL integer HRC 3.2.1.7

PMTU aging timeout integer MTU 6.6

MTU plateau table (list) MTU 7

IP-layer_parameters,_per_interface:_

IP address (address) HRC 3.3.1.6

Subnet mask (address mask) HRC 3.3.1.6

MTU integer HRC 3.3.3

All-subnets-MTU on/off HRC 3.3.3

Broadcast address flavor 0x00000000/0xffffffff HRC 3.3.6

Perform mask discovery on/off HRC 3.2.2.9

Be a mask supplier on/off HRC 3.2.2.9

Perform router discovery on/off RD 5.1

Router solicitation address (address) RD 5.1

Default routers, list of:

router address (address) HRC 3.3.1.6

preference level integer HRC 3.3.1.6

Static routes, list of:

destination (host/subnet/net) HRC 3.3.1.2

destination mask (address mask) HRC 3.3.1.2

type-of-service integer HRC 3.3.1.2

first-hop router (address) HRC 3.3.1.2

ignore redirects on/off HRC 3.3.1.2

PMTU integer MTU 6.6

perform PMTU discovery on/off MTU 6.6

Link-layer_parameters,_per_interface:_

Trailers on/off HRC 2.3.1

ARP cache timeout integer HRC 2.3.2.1

Ethernet encapsulation (RFC894/RFC1042) HRC 2.3.3

TCP_parameters,_per_host:_

TTL integer HRC 4.2.2.19

Keep-alive interval integer HRC 4.2.3.6

Keep-alive data size 0/1 HRC 4.2.3.6

Key:

MTU = Path MTU Discovery (RFC1191, Proposed Standard)

RD = Router Discovery (RFC1256, Proposed Standard)

 
 
 
免责声明:本文为网络用户发布,其观点仅代表作者个人观点,与本站无关,本站仅提供信息存储服务。文中陈述内容未经本站证实,其真实性、完整性、及时性本站不作任何保证或承诺,请读者仅作参考,并请自行核实相关内容。
2023年上半年GDP全球前十五强
 百态   2023-10-24
美众议院议长启动对拜登的弹劾调查
 百态   2023-09-13
上海、济南、武汉等多地出现不明坠落物
 探索   2023-09-06
印度或要将国名改为“巴拉特”
 百态   2023-09-06
男子为女友送行,买票不登机被捕
 百态   2023-08-20
手机地震预警功能怎么开?
 干货   2023-08-06
女子4年卖2套房花700多万做美容:不但没变美脸,面部还出现变形
 百态   2023-08-04
住户一楼被水淹 还冲来8头猪
 百态   2023-07-31
女子体内爬出大量瓜子状活虫
 百态   2023-07-25
地球连续35年收到神秘规律性信号,网友:不要回答!
 探索   2023-07-21
全球镓价格本周大涨27%
 探索   2023-07-09
钱都流向了那些不缺钱的人,苦都留给了能吃苦的人
 探索   2023-07-02
倩女手游刀客魅者强控制(强混乱强眩晕强睡眠)和对应控制抗性的关系
 百态   2020-08-20
美国5月9日最新疫情:美国确诊人数突破131万
 百态   2020-05-09
荷兰政府宣布将集体辞职
 干货   2020-04-30
倩女幽魂手游师徒任务情义春秋猜成语答案逍遥观:鹏程万里
 干货   2019-11-12
倩女幽魂手游师徒任务情义春秋猜成语答案神机营:射石饮羽
 干货   2019-11-12
倩女幽魂手游师徒任务情义春秋猜成语答案昆仑山:拔刀相助
 干货   2019-11-12
倩女幽魂手游师徒任务情义春秋猜成语答案天工阁:鬼斧神工
 干货   2019-11-12
倩女幽魂手游师徒任务情义春秋猜成语答案丝路古道:单枪匹马
 干货   2019-11-12
倩女幽魂手游师徒任务情义春秋猜成语答案镇郊荒野:与虎谋皮
 干货   2019-11-12
倩女幽魂手游师徒任务情义春秋猜成语答案镇郊荒野:李代桃僵
 干货   2019-11-12
倩女幽魂手游师徒任务情义春秋猜成语答案镇郊荒野:指鹿为马
 干货   2019-11-12
倩女幽魂手游师徒任务情义春秋猜成语答案金陵:小鸟依人
 干货   2019-11-12
倩女幽魂手游师徒任务情义春秋猜成语答案金陵:千金买邻
 干货   2019-11-12
 
推荐阅读
 
 
 
>>返回首頁<<
 
靜靜地坐在廢墟上,四周的荒凉一望無際,忽然覺得,淒涼也很美
© 2005- 王朝網路 版權所有