3com WX3000 Manuel D’Utilisation

Page de 715
 
1-3 
Updating IP Address Lease 
After a DHCP server dynamically assigns an IP address to a DHCP client, the IP address keeps valid 
only within a specified lease time and will be reclaimed by the DHCP server when the lease expires. If 
the DHCP client wants to use the IP address for a longer time, it must update the IP lease.  
By default, a DHCP client updates its IP address lease automatically by unicasting a DHCP-REQUEST 
packet to the DHCP server when half of the lease time elapses. The DHCP server responds with a 
DHCP-ACK packet to notify the DHCP client of a new IP lease if the server can assign the same IP 
address to the client. Otherwise, the DHCP server responds with a DHCP-NAK packet to notify the 
DHCP client that the IP address will be reclaimed when the lease time expires.  
If the DHCP client fails to update its IP address lease when half of the lease time elapses, it will update 
its IP address lease by broadcasting a DHCP-REQUEST packet to the DHCP servers again when 
seven-eighths of the lease time elapses. The DHCP server performs the same operations as those 
described above.  
DHCP Packet Format 
DHCP has eight types of packets. They have the same format, but the values of some fields in the 
packets are different. The DHCP packet format is based on that of the BOOTP packets. The following 
figure describes the packet format (the number in the brackets indicates the field length, in bytes):  
Figure 1-2 DHCP packet format 
op (1)
0
7
15
htype (1)
hlen (1)
hops (1)
xid (4)
23
31
secs (2)
flags (2)
ciaddr (4)
yiaddr (4)
siaddr (4)
giaddr (4)
chaddr (16)
sname (64)
file (128)
options (variable)
 
 
The fields are described as follows: 
op: Operation types of DHCP packets, 1 for request packets and 2 for response packets.  
htype, hlen: Hardware address type and length of the DHCP client.  
hops: Number of DHCP relay agents which a DHCP packet passes. For each DHCP relay agent 
that the DHCP request packet passes, the field value increases by 1.  
xid: Random number that the client selects when it initiates a request. The number is used to 
identify an address-requesting process.  
secs: Elapsed time after the DHCP client initiates a DHCP request.  
flags: The first bit is the broadcast response flag bit, used to identify that the DHCP response 
packet is a unicast (set to 0) or broadcast (set to 1). Other bits are reserved.  
ciaddr: IP address of a DHCP client.  
yiaddr: IP address that the DHCP server assigns to a client.