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Overview
Servers and Relay Agents
IP Addresses
Create
Address Wizard
Duplicate
Modify
Address
Name
Server
Macro
Comment
Client ID
Reserved
Lease
BOOTP
Unusable
Modify Multiple
Release
Delete
Macros
Options
How To..
Menus
Index
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Modify Address
The Address Properties dialog box lets you view and modify the settings for
an address in the current DHCP network table on the selected DHCP server. The
results of this dialog are analogous to those generated by the SolarisTM
pntadm -M command.
| To modify
several addresses at once, select the addresses in the View Addresses main window,
and then choose Properties from the Edit menu to display the Modify Multiple Addresses dialog box. |
The settings in the Address Properties dialog box are described below.
| IP Address |
Specify the IP address to make available to new
DHCP clients. The new address must be unique in the current DHCP network table. |
| Client Name (optional) |
Specify the host name of the client. If you use this option, the DHCP Manager will
attempt to create an entry in the hosts
table. |
| Owned By Server |
Specify the IP address of the DHCP server
that owns the new IP address. This server is
responsible for initially responding to the DHCP client's request for
IP address allocation. |
| Configuration Macro |
Specify an optional macro for the server to
use to obtain client configuration parameters from the dhcptab
database. Click the arrow to see a list of macros available on the
server. If the macro you want to specify does not already exist on the server, you
can create it, using the Create Macro
dialog box. |
| Comment (optional) |
Enter an optional text comment. |
Click Lease to configure the setting for lease status and expiration.
The following settings are available.
| Client ID |
A hexadecimal string representing the
octets that identify the client. The number of characters in this
field must be an even number, with a maximum length of 64 characters.
Entries with 00 are available for dynamic allocation to
requesting clients.
BOOTP clients are identified by the concatenation of the network
hardware type and the client's hardware address. For example, a BOOTP
client with a hardware type of 01 (10-Mb Ethernet) and a
hardware address of 8:0:20:11:12:b7 would have a client ID of
010800201112B7. |
| Reserved |
The address is reserved for this client and cannot be reclaimed
by the server. |
| Lease Policy |
Dynamic: The DHCP server is responsible for the allocation
and re-allocation of this range of IP addresses.
Enter the expiration time of the lease. You can specify an
expiration date for the lease in mm/dd/yyyy format.
Permanent: The lease does not expire.
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| Assign Only to BOOTP Clients |
The selected IP address is reserved for
BOOTP clients. |
| Address is Unusable |
This IP address cannot be used. You can use this setting together with Reserved to prevent a client from booting. |
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