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1 Internet Systems Consortium DHCP Distribution
2 Version 4.3.2b1
3 05 February 2015
4
5 README FILE
6
7 You should read this file carefully before trying to install or use
8 the ISC DHCP Distribution.
9
10 TABLE OF CONTENTS
11
12 1 WHERE TO FIND DOCUMENTATION
13 2 RELEASE STATUS
14 3 BUILDING THE DHCP DISTRIBUTION
15 3.1 UNPACKING IT
16 3.2 CONFIGURING IT
17 3.2.1 DYNAMIC DNS UPDATES
18 3.2.2 LOCALLY DEFINED OPTIONS
19 3.3 BUILDING IT
20 4 INSTALLING THE DHCP DISTRIBUTION
21 5 USING THE DHCP DISTRIBUTION
22 5.1 FIREWALL RULES
23 5.2 LINUX
24 5.2.1 IF_TR.H NOT FOUND
25 5.2.2 SO_ATTACH_FILTER UNDECLARED
26 5.2.3 PROTOCOL NOT CONFIGURED
27 5.2.4 BROADCAST
28 5.2.6 IP BOOTP AGENT
29 5.2.7 MULTIPLE INTERFACES
30 5.3 SCO
31 5.4 HP-UX
32 5.5 ULTRIX
33 5.6 FreeBSD
34 5.7 NeXTSTEP
35 5.8 SOLARIS
36 5.8.1 Solaris 11
37 5.8.2 Solaris 11 and ATF
38 5.8.3 Other Solaris Items
39 5.9 AIX
40 5.10 MacOS X
41 6 SUPPORT
42 6.1 HOW TO REPORT BUGS
43 7 HISTORY
44
45 WHERE TO FIND DOCUMENTATION
46
47 Documentation for this software includes this README file, the
48 RELNOTES file, and the manual pages, which are in the server, common,
49 client and relay subdirectories. The README file (this file) includes
50 late-breaking operational and system-specific information that you
51 should read even if you don't want to read the manual pages, and that
52 you should *certainly* read if you run into trouble. Internet
53 standards relating to the DHCP protocol are listed in the References
54 document that is available in html, txt and xml formats in doc/
55 subdirectory. You will have the best luck reading the manual pages if
56 you build this software and then install it, although you can read
57 them directly out of the distribution if you need to.
58
59 DHCP server documentation is in the dhcpd man page. Information about
60 the DHCP server lease database is in the dhcpd.leases man page.
61 Server configuration documentation is in the dhcpd.conf man page as
62 well as the dhcp-options man page. A sample DHCP server
63 configuration is in the file server/dhcpd.conf.example. The source for
64 the dhcpd, dhcpd.leases and dhcpd.conf man pages is in the server/ sub-
65 directory in the distribution. The source for the dhcp-options.5
66 man page is in the common/ subdirectory.
67
68 DHCP Client documentation is in the dhclient man page. DHCP client
69 configuration documentation is in the dhclient.conf man page and the
70 dhcp-options man page. The DHCP client configuration script is
71 documented in the dhclient-script man page. The format of the DHCP
72 client lease database is documented in the dhclient.leases man page.
73 The source for all these man pages is in the client/ subdirectory in
74 the distribution. In addition, the dhcp-options man page should be
75 referred to for information about DHCP options.
76
77 DHCP relay agent documentation is in the dhcrelay man page, the source
78 for which is distributed in the relay/ subdirectory.
79
80 To read installed manual pages, use the man command. Type "man page"
81 where page is the name of the manual page. This will only work if
82 you have installed the ISC DHCP distribution using the ``make install''
83 command (described later).
84
85 If you want to read manual pages that aren't installed, you can type
86 ``nroff -man page |more'' where page is the filename of the
87 unformatted manual page. The filename of an unformatted manual page
88 is the name of the manual page, followed by '.', followed by some
89 number - 5 for documentation about files, and 8 for documentation
90 about programs. For example, to read the dhcp-options man page,
91 you would type ``nroff -man common/dhcp-options.5 |more'', assuming
92 your current working directory is the top level directory of the ISC
93 DHCP Distribution.
94
95 Please note that the pathnames of files to which our manpages refer
96 will not be correct for your operating system until after you iterate
97 'make install' (so if you're reading a manpage out of the source
98 directory, it may not have up-to-date information).
99
100 RELEASE STATUS
101
102 This is ISC DHCP 4.3.x The major theme for this release is "ipv6 uplift",
103 in which we enhance the v6 code to support many of the features found
104 in the v4 code. These include: support for v6, support for on_commit,
105 on_expiry and on_release in v6, support for accessing v6 relay options
106 and better log messages for v6 addresses. Non v6 features include:
107 support for the standard DDNS, better OMAPI class and sub-class support
108 allowing for dynamic addition and removal of sub-classes, and support for
109 DDNS without zone statements.
110
111 In this release, the DHCPv6 server should be fully functional on Linux,
112 Solaris, or any BSD. The DHCPv6 client should be similarly functional
113 except on Solaris.
114
115 The DHCPv4 server, relay, and client, should be fully functional
116 on Linux, Solaris, any BSD, HPUX, SCO, NextSTEP, and Irix.
117
118 If you are running the DHCP distribution on a machine which is a
119 firewall, or if there is a firewall between your DHCP server(s) and
120 DHCP clients, please read the section on firewalls which appears later
121 in this document.
122
123 If you wish to run the DHCP Distribution on Linux, please see the
124 Linux-specific notes later in this document. If you wish to run on an
125 SCO release, please see the SCO-specific notes later in this document.
126 You particularly need to read these notes if you intend to support
127 Windows 95 clients. If you are running HP-UX or Ultrix, please read the
128 notes for those operating systems below. If you are running NeXTSTEP,
129 please see the notes on NeXTSTEP below.
130
131 If you start dhcpd and get a message, "no free bpf", that means you
132 need to configure the Berkeley Packet Filter into your operating
133 system kernel. On NetBSD, FreeBSD and BSD/os, type ``man bpf'' for
134 information. On Digital Unix, type ``man pfilt''.
135
136
137 BUILDING THE DHCP DISTRIBUTION
138
139 UNPACKING IT
140
141 To build the DHCP Distribution, unpack the compressed tar file using
142 the tar utility and the gzip command - type something like:
143
144 gunzip dhcp-4.3.2b1.tar.gz
145 tar xvf dhcp-4.3.2b1.tar
146
147 CONFIGURING IT
148
149 Now, cd to the dhcp-4.3.2b1 subdirectory that you've just created and
150 configure the source tree by typing:
151
152 ./configure
153
154 If the configure utility can figure out what sort of system you're
155 running on, it will create a custom Makefile for you for that
156 system; otherwise, it will complain. If it can't figure out what
157 system you are using, that system is not supported - you are on
158 your own.
159
160 Several options may be enabled or disabled via the configure command.
161 You can get a list of these by typing:
162
163 ./configure --help
164
165 DYNAMIC DNS UPDATES
166
167 A fully-featured implementation of dynamic DNS updates is included in
168 this release. It uses libraries from BIND and, to avoid issues with
169 different versions, includes the necessary BIND version. The appropriate
170 BIND libraries will be compiled and installed in the bind subdirectory
171 as part of the make step. In order to build the necessary libraries you
172 will need to have "gmake" available on your build system.
173
174
175 There is documentation for the DDNS support in the dhcpd.conf manual
176 page - see the beginning of this document for information on finding
177 manual pages.
178
179 LOCALLY DEFINED OPTIONS
180
181 In previous versions of the DHCP server there was a mechanism whereby
182 options that were not known by the server could be configured using
183 a name made up of the option code number and an identifier:
184 "option-nnn" This is no longer supported, because it is not future-
185 proof. Instead, if you want to use an option that the server doesn't
186 know about, you must explicitly define it using the method described
187 in the dhcp-options man page under the DEFINING NEW OPTIONS heading.
188
189 BUILDING IT
190
191 Once you've run configure, just type ``make'', and after a while
192 you should have a dhcp server. If you get compile errors on one
193 of the supported systems mentioned earlier, please let us know.
194 If you get warnings, it's not likely to be a problem - the DHCP
195 server compiles completely warning-free on as many architectures
196 as we can manage, but there are a few for which this is difficult.
197 If you get errors on a system not mentioned above, you will need
198 to do some programming or debugging on your own to get the DHCP
199 Distribution working.
200
201 INSTALLING THE DHCP DISTRIBUTION
202
203 Once you have successfully gotten the DHCP Distribution to build, you
204 can install it by typing ``make install''. If you already have an old
205 version of the DHCP Distribution installed, you may want to save it
206 before typing ``make install''.
207
208 USING THE DHCP DISTRIBUTION
209
210 FIREWALL RULES
211
212 If you are running the DHCP server or client on a computer that's also
213 acting as a firewall, you must be sure to allow DHCP packets through
214 the firewall. In particular, your firewall rules _must_ allow packets
215 from IP address 0.0.0.0 to IP address 255.255.255.255 from UDP port 68
216 to UDP port 67 through. They must also allow packets from your local
217 firewall's IP address and UDP port 67 through to any address your DHCP
218 server might serve on UDP port 68. Finally, packets from relay agents
219 on port 67 to the DHCP server on port 67, and vice versa, must be
220 permitted.
221
222 We have noticed that on some systems where we are using a packet
223 filter, if you set up a firewall that blocks UDP port 67 and 68
224 entirely, packets sent through the packet filter will not be blocked.
225 However, unicast packets will be blocked. This can result in strange
226 behaviour, particularly on DHCP clients, where the initial packet
227 exchange is broadcast, but renewals are unicast - the client will
228 appear to be unable to renew until it starts broadcasting its
229 renewals, and then suddenly it'll work. The fix is to fix the
230 firewall rules as described above.
231
232 PARTIAL SERVERS
233
234 If you have a server that is connected to two networks, and you only
235 want to provide DHCP service on one of those networks (e.g., you are
236 using a cable modem and have set up a NAT router), if you don't write
237 any subnet declaration for the network you aren't supporting, the DHCP
238 server will ignore input on that network interface if it can. If it
239 can't, it will refuse to run - some operating systems do not have the
240 capability of supporting DHCP on machines with more than one
241 interface, and ironically this is the case even if you don't want to
242 provide DHCP service on one of those interfaces.
243
244 LINUX
245
246 There are three big LINUX issues: the all-ones broadcast address,
247 Linux 2.1 ip_bootp_agent enabling, and operations with more than one
248 network interface. There are also two potential compilation/runtime
249 problems for Linux 2.1/2.2: the "SO_ATTACH_FILTER undeclared" problem
250 and the "protocol not configured" problem.
251
252 LINUX: PROTOCOL NOT CONFIGURED
253
254 If you get the following message, it's because your kernel doesn't
255 have the linux packetfilter or raw packet socket configured:
256
257 Make sure CONFIG_PACKET (Packet socket) and CONFIG_FILTER (Socket
258 Filtering) are enabled in your kernel configuration
259
260 If this happens, you need to configure your Linux kernel to support
261 Socket Filtering and the Packet socket, or to select a kernel provided
262 by your Linux distribution that has these enabled (virtually all modern
263 ones do by default).
264
265 LINUX: BROADCAST
266
267 If you are running a recent version of Linux, this won't be a problem,
268 but on older versions of Linux (kernel versions prior to 2.2), there
269 is a potential problem with the broadcast address being sent
270 incorrectly.
271
272 In order for dhcpd to work correctly with picky DHCP clients (e.g.,
273 Windows 95), it must be able to send packets with an IP destination
274 address of 255.255.255.255. Unfortunately, Linux changes an IP
275 destination of 255.255.255.255 into the local subnet broadcast address
276 (here, that's 192.5.5.223).
277
278 This isn't generally a problem on Linux 2.2 and later kernels, since
279 we completely bypass the Linux IP stack, but on old versions of Linux
280 2.1 and all versions of Linux prior to 2.1, it is a problem - pickier
281 DHCP clients connected to the same network as the ISC DHCP server or
282 ISC relay agent will not see messages from the DHCP server. It *is*
283 possible to run into trouble with this on Linux 2.2 and later if you
284 are running a version of the DHCP server that was compiled on a Linux
285 2.0 system, though.
286
287 It is possible to work around this problem on some versions of Linux
288 by creating a host route from your network interface address to
289 255.255.255.255. The command you need to use to do this on Linux
290 varies from version to version. The easiest version is:
291
292 route add -host 255.255.255.255 dev eth0
293
294 On some older Linux systems, you will get an error if you try to do
295 this. On those systems, try adding the following entry to your
296 /etc/hosts file:
297
298 255.255.255.255 all-ones
299
300 Then, try:
301
302 route add -host all-ones dev eth0
303
304 Another route that has worked for some users is:
305
306 route add -net 255.255.255.0 dev eth0
307
308 If you are not using eth0 as your network interface, you should
309 specify the network interface you *are* using in your route command.
310
311 LINUX: IP BOOTP AGENT
312
313 Some versions of the Linux 2.1 kernel apparently prevent dhcpd from
314 working unless you enable it by doing the following:
315
316 echo 1 >/proc/sys/net/ipv4/ip_bootp_agent
317
318
319 LINUX: MULTIPLE INTERFACES
320
321 Very old versions of the Linux kernel do not provide a networking API
322 that allows dhcpd to operate correctly if the system has more than one
323 broadcast network interface. However, Linux 2.0 kernels with version
324 numbers greater than or equal to 2.0.31 add an API feature: the
325 SO_BINDTODEVICE socket option. If SO_BINDTODEVICE is present, it is
326 possible for dhcpd to operate on Linux with more than one network
327 interface. In order to take advantage of this, you must be running a
328 2.0.31 or greater kernel, and you must have 2.0.31 or later system
329 headers installed *before* you build the DHCP Distribution.
330
331 We have heard reports that you must still add routes to 255.255.255.255
332 in order for the all-ones broadcast to work, even on 2.0.31 kernels.
333 In fact, you now need to add a route for each interface. Hopefully
334 the Linux kernel gurus will get this straight eventually.
335
336 Linux 2.1 and later kernels do not use SO_BINDTODEVICE or require the
337 broadcast address hack, but do support multiple interfaces, using the
338 Linux Packet Filter.
339
340 LINUX: OpenWrt
341
342 DHCP 4.1 has been tested on OpenWrt 7.09 and 8.09. In keeping with
343 standard practice, client/scripts now includes a dhclient-script file
344 for OpenWrt. However, this is not sufficient by itself to run dhcp on
345 OpenWrt; a full OpenWrt package for DHCP is available at
346 ftp://ftp.isc.org/isc/dhcp/dhcp-4.1.0-openwrt.tar.gz
347
348 LINUX: 802.1q VLAN INTERFACES
349
350 If you're using 802.1q vlan interfaces on Linux, it is necessary to
351 vconfig the subinterface(s) to rewrite the 802.1q information out of
352 packets received by the dhcpd daemon via LPF:
353
354 vconfig set_flag eth1.523 1 1
355
356 Note that this may affect the performance of your system, since the
357 Linux kernel must rewrite packets received via this interface. For
358 more information, consult the vconfig man pages.
359
360 SCO
361
362 ISC DHCP will now work correctly on newer versions of SCO out of the
363 box (tested on OpenServer 5.05b, assumed to work on UnixWare 7).
364
365 Older versions of SCO have the same problem as Linux (described earlier).
366 The thing is, SCO *really* doesn't want to let you add a host route to
367 the all-ones broadcast address.
368
369 You can try the following:
370
371 ifconfig net0 xxx.xxx.xxx.xxx netmask 0xNNNNNNNN broadcast 255.255.255.255
372
373 If this doesn't work, you can also try the following strange hack:
374
375 ifconfig net0 alias 10.1.1.1 netmask 8.0.0.0
376
377 Apparently this works because of an interaction between SCO's support
378 for network classes and the weird netmask. The 10.* network is just a
379 dummy that can generally be assumed to be safe. Don't ask why this
380 works. Just try it. If it works for you, great.
381
382 HP-UX
383
384 HP-UX has the same problem with the all-ones broadcast address that
385 SCO and Linux have. One user reported that adding the following to
386 /etc/rc.config.d/netconf helped (you may have to modify this to suit
387 your local configuration):
388
389 INTERFACE_NAME[0]=lan0
390 IP_ADDRESS[0]=1.1.1.1
391 SUBNET_MASK[0]=255.255.255.0
392 BROADCAST_ADDRESS[0]="255.255.255.255"
393 LANCONFIG_ARGS[0]="ether"
394 DHCP_ENABLE[0]=0
395
396 ULTRIX
397
398 Now that we have Ultrix packet filter support, the DHCP Distribution
399 on Ultrix should be pretty trouble-free. However, one thing you do
400 need to be aware of is that it now requires that the pfilt device be
401 configured into your kernel and present in /dev. If you type ``man
402 packetfilter'', you will get some information on how to configure your
403 kernel for the packet filter (if it isn't already) and how to make an
404 entry for it in /dev.
405
406 FreeBSD
407
408 Versions of FreeBSD prior to 2.2 have a bug in BPF support in that the
409 ethernet driver swaps the ethertype field in the ethernet header
410 downstream from BPF, which corrupts the output packet. If you are
411 running a version of FreeBSD prior to 2.2, and you find that dhcpd
412 can't communicate with its clients, you should #define BROKEN_FREEBSD_BPF
413 in site.h and recompile.
414
415 Modern versions of FreeBSD include the ISC DHCP 3.0 client as part of
416 the base system, and the full distribution (for the DHCP server and
417 relay agent) is available from the Ports Collection in
418 /usr/ports/net/isc-dhcp3, or as a package on FreeBSD installation
419 CDROMs.
420
421 NeXTSTEP
422
423 The NeXTSTEP support uses the NeXTSTEP Berkeley Packet Filter
424 extension, which is not included in the base NextStep system. You
425 must install this extension in order to get dhcpd or dhclient to work.
426
427 SOLARIS
428
429 There are two known issues seen when compiling using the Sun compiler.
430
431 The first is that older Sun compilers generate an error on some of
432 our uses of the flexible array option. Newer versions only generate
433 a warning, which can be safely ignored. If you run into this error
434 ("type of struct member "buf" can not be derived from structure with
435 flexible array member"), upgrade your tools to Oracle Solaris Studio
436 (previously Sun Studio) 12 or something newer.
437
438 The second is the interaction between the configure script and the
439 makefiles for the Bind libraries. Currently we don't pass all
440 environment variables between the DHCP configure and the Bind configure.
441
442 If you attempt to specify the compiler you wish to use like this:
443
444 CC=/opt/SUNWspro/bin/cc ./configure
445
446 "make" may not build the Bind libraries with that compiler.
447
448 In order to use the same compiler for Bind and DHCP we suggest the
449 following commands:
450
451 CC=/opt/SUNWspro/bin/cc ./configure
452 CC=/opt/SUNWspro/bin/cc make
453
454 Solaris 11
455
456 We have integrated a patch from Oracle to use sockets instead of
457 DLPI on Solaris 11. This functionality was written for use with
458 Solaris Studio 12.2 and requires the system/header package.
459
460 By default this code is disabled in order to minimize disruptions
461 for current users. In order to enable this code you will need to
462 enable both USE_SOCKETS and USE_V4_PKTINFO as part of the
463 configuration step. The command line would be something like:
464
465 ./configure --enable-use-sockets --enable-ipv4-pktinfo
466
467 Solaris 11 and ATF
468
469 We have reports that ATF 0.15 and 0.16 do not build on Solaris 11. The
470 following changes to the ATF source code appear to fix this issue:
471
472 diff -ru atf-0.15/atf-c/tp_test.c atf-0.15-patched/atf-c/tp_test.c
473 --- atf-0.15/atf-c/tp_test.c 2011-12-06 06:31:11.000000000 +0100
474 +++ atf-0.15-patched/atf-c/tp_test.c 2012-06-19 15:54:57.000000000 +0200
475 @@ -28,6 +28,7 @@
476 */
477
478 #include <string.h>
479 +#include <stdio.h>
480 #include <unistd.h>
481
482 #include <atf-c.h>
483
484 diff -ru atf-0.15/atf-run/requirements.cpp atf-0.15-patched/atf-run/requirements.cpp
485 --- atf-0.15/atf-run/requirements.cpp 2012-01-13 20:44:25.000000000 +0100
486 +++ atf-0.15-patched/atf-run/requirements.cpp 2012-06-19 15:41:51.000000000 +0200
487 @@ -29,7 +29,7 @@
488
489 extern "C" {
490 #include <sys/param.h>
491 -#include <sys/sysctl.h>
492 +//#include <sys/sysctl.h>
493 }
494
495 #include <cerrno>
496
497 Other Solaris Items
498
499 One problem which has been observed and is not fixed in this
500 patchlevel has to do with using DLPI on Solaris machines. The symptom
501 of this problem is that the DHCP server never receives any requests.
502 This has been observed with Solaris 2.6 and Solaris 7 on Intel x86
503 systems, although it may occur with other systems as well. If you
504 encounter this symptom, and you are running the DHCP server on a
505 machine with a single broadcast network interface, you may wish to
506 edit the includes/site.h file and uncomment the #define USE_SOCKETS
507 line. Then type ``make clean; make''. As an alternative workaround,
508 it has been reported that running 'snoop' will cause the dhcp server
509 to start receiving packets. So the practice reported to us is to run
510 snoop at dhcpd startup time, with arguments to cause it to receive one
511 packet and exit.
512
513 snoop -c 1 udp port 67 > /dev/null &
514
515 The DHCP client on Solaris will only work with DLPI. If you run it
516 and it just keeps saying it's sending DHCPREQUEST packets, but never
517 gets a response, you may be having DLPI trouble as described above.
518 If so, we have no solution to offer at this time, aside from the above
519 workaround which should also work here. Also, because Solaris requires
520 you to "plumb" an interface before it can be detected by the DHCP client,
521 you must either specify the name(s) of the interface(s) you want to
522 configure on the command line, or must plumb the interfaces prior to
523 invoking the DHCP client. This can be done with ``ifconfig iface plumb'',
524 where iface is the name of the interface (e.g., ``ifconfig hme0 plumb'').
525
526 It should be noted that Solaris versions from 2.6 onward include a
527 DHCP client that you can run with ``/sbin/ifconfig iface dhcp start''
528 rather than using the ISC DHCP client, including DHCPv6. Consequently,
529 we don't believe there is a need for the client to run on Solaris, and
530 have not engineered the needed DHCPv6 modifications for the dhclient-script.
531 If you feel this is in error, or have a need, please contact us.
532
533 AIX
534
535 The AIX support uses the BSD socket API, which cannot differentiate on
536 which network interface a broadcast packet was received; thus the DHCP
537 server and relay will work only on a single interface. (They do work
538 on multi-interface machines if configured to listen on only one of the
539 interfaces.)
540
541 We have reports of Windows XP clients having difficulty retrieving
542 addresses from a server running on an AIX machine. This issue
543 was traced to the client requiring messages be sent to the all ones
544 broadcast address (255.255.255.255) while the AIX server was sending
545 to 192.168.0.255.
546
547 You may be able to solve this by including a relay between the client
548 and server with the relay configured to use a broadcast of all-ones.
549
550 A second option that worked for AIX 5.1 but doesn't seem to work for
551 AIX 5.3 was to:
552 create a host file entry for all-ones (255.255.255.255)
553 and then add a route:
554 route add -host all-ones -interface <local-ip-address>
555
556 The ISC DHCP distribution does not include a dhclient-script for AIX--
557 AIX comes with a DHCP client. Contribution of a working dhclient-script
558 for AIX would be welcome.
559
560
561 MacOS X
562
563 The MacOS X system uses a TCP/IP stack derived from FreeBSD with a
564 user-friendly interface named the System Configuration Framework.
565 As it includes a builtin DHCPv4 client (you are better just using that),
566 this text is only about the DHCPv6 client (``dhclient -6 ...''). The DNS
567 configuration (domain search list and name servers' addresses) is managed
568 by a System Configuration agent, not by /etc/resolv.conf (which is a link
569 to /var/run/resolv.conf, which itself only reflects the internal state;
570 the System Configuration framework's Dynamic Store).
571
572 This means that modifying resolv.conf directly doesn't have the
573 intended effect, instead the macos script sample creates its own
574 resolv.conf.dhclient6 in /var/run, and inserts the contents of this
575 file into the Dynamic Store.
576
577 When updating the address configuration the System Configuration
578 framework expects the prefix and a default router along with the
579 configured address. As this extra information is not available via
580 the DHCPv6 protocol the System Configuration framework isn't usable
581 for address configuration, instead ifconfig is used directly.
582
583 Note the Dynamic Store (from which /var/run/resolv.conf is built) is
584 recomputed from scratch when the current location/set is changed.
585 Running the dhclient-script reinstalls the resolv.conf.dhclient6
586 configuration.
587
588 SUPPORT
589
590 The Internet Systems Consortium DHCP server is developed and distributed
591 by ISC in the public trust, thanks to the generous donations of its
592 sponsors. ISC now also offers commercial quality support contracts for
593 ISC DHCP, more information about ISC Support Contracts can be found at
594 the following URL:
595
596 https://www.isc.org/services/support/
597
598 Please understand that we may not respond to support inquiries unless
599 you have a support contract. ISC will continue its practice of always
600 responding to critical items that effect the entire community, and
601 responding to all other requests for support upon ISC's mailing lists
602 on a best-effort basis.
603
604 However, ISC DHCP has attracted a fairly sizable following on the
605 Internet, which means that there are a lot of knowledgeable users who
606 may be able to help you if you get stuck. These people generally
607 read the dhcp-users@isc.org mailing list. Be sure to provide as much
608 detail in your query as possible.
609
610 If you are going to use ISC DHCP, you should probably subscribe to
611 the dhcp-users or dhcp-announce mailing lists.
612
613 WHERE TO SEND FEATURE REQUESTS: We like to hear your feedback. We may
614 not respond to it all the time, but we do read it. If ISC DHCP doesn't
615 work well for you, or you have an idea that would improve it for your
616 use, please send your suggestion to dhcp-suggest@isc.org. This is also
617 an excellent place to send patches that add new features.
618
619 WHERE TO REPORT BUGS: If you want the act of sending in a bug report
620 to result in you getting help in the form of a fixed piece of
621 software, you are asking for help. Your bug report is helpful to us,
622 but fundamentally you are making a support request, so please use the
623 addresses described in the previous paragraphs. If you are _sure_ that
624 your problem is a bug, and not user error, or if your bug report
625 includes a patch, you can send it to our ticketing system at
626 dhcp-bugs@isc.org. If you have not received a notice that the ticket
627 has been resolved, then we're still working on it.
628
629 PLEASE DO NOT REPORT BUGS IN OLD SOFTWARE RELEASES! Fetch the latest
630 release and see if the bug is still in that version of the software,
631 and if it is still present, _then_ report it. ISC release versions
632 always have three numbers, for example: 1.2.3. The 'major release' is
633 1 here, the 'minor release' is 2, and the 'maintenance release' is 3.
634 ISC will accept bug reports against the most recent two major.minor
635 releases: for example, 1.0.0 and 0.9.0, but not 0.8.* or prior.
636
637 PLEASE take a moment to determine where the ISC DHCP distribution
638 that you're using came from. ISC DHCP is sometimes heavily modified
639 by integrators in various operating systems - it's not that we
640 feel that our software is perfect and incapable of having bugs, but
641 rather that it is very frustrating to find out after many days trying
642 to help someone that the sources you're looking at aren't what they're
643 running. When in doubt, please retrieve the source distribution from
644 ISC's web page and install it.
645
646 HOW TO REPORT BUGS OR REQUEST HELP
647
648 When you report bugs or ask for help, please provide us complete
649 information. A list of information we need follows. Please read it
650 carefully, and put all the information you can into your initial bug
651 report. This will save us a great deal of time and more informative
652 bug reports are more likely to get handled more quickly overall.
653
654 1. The specific operating system name and version of the
655 machine on which the DHCP server or client is running.
656 2. The specific operating system name and version of the
657 machine on which the client is running, if you are having
658 trouble getting a client working with the server.
659 3. If you're running Linux, the version number we care about is
660 the kernel version and maybe the library version, not the
661 distribution version - e.g., while we don't mind knowing
662 that you're running Redhat version mumble.foo, we must know
663 what kernel version you're running, and it helps if you can
664 tell us what version of the C library you're running,
665 although if you don't know that off the top of your head it
666 may be hard for you to figure it out, so don't go crazy
667 trying.
668 4. The specific version of the DHCP distribution you're
669 running, as reported by dhcpd -t.
670 5. Please explain the problem carefully, thinking through what
671 you're saying to ensure that you don't assume we know
672 something about your situation that we don't know.
673 6. Include your dhcpd.conf and dhcpd.leases file as MIME attachments
674 if they're not over 100 kilobytes in size each. If they are
675 this large, please make them available to us eg via a hidden
676 http:// URL or FTP site. If you're not comfortable releasing
677 this information due to sensitive contents, you may encrypt
678 the file to our release signing key, available on our website.
679 7. Include a log of your server or client running until it
680 encounters the problem - for example, if you are having
681 trouble getting some client to get an address, restart the
682 server with the -d flag and then restart the client, and
683 send us what the server prints. Likewise, with the client,
684 include the output of the client as it fails to get an
685 address or otherwise does the wrong thing. Do not leave
686 out parts of the output that you think aren't interesting.
687 8. If the client or server is dumping core, please run the
688 debugger and get a stack trace, and include that in your
689 bug report. For example, if your debugger is gdb, do the
690 following:
691
692 gdb dhcpd dhcpd.core
693 (gdb) where
694 [...]
695 (gdb) quit
696
697 This assumes that it's the dhcp server you're debugging, and
698 that the core file is in dhcpd.core.
699
700 Please see https://www.isc.org/software/dhcp/ for details on how to subscribe
701 to the ISC DHCP mailing lists.
702
703 HISTORY
704
705 ISC DHCP was originally written by Ted Lemon under a contract with
706 Vixie Labs with the goal of being a complete reference implementation
707 of the DHCP protocol. Funding for this project was provided by
708 Internet Systems Consortium. The first release of the ISC DHCP
709 distribution in December 1997 included just the DHCP server.
710 Release 2 in June 1999 added a DHCP client and a BOOTP/DHCP relay
711 agent. DHCP 3 was released in October 2001 and included DHCP failover
712 support, OMAPI, Dynamic DNS, conditional behaviour, client classing,
713 and more. Version 3 of the DHCP server was funded by Nominum, Inc.
714 The 4.0 release in December 2007 introduced DHCPv6 protocol support
715 for the server and client.
716
717 This product includes cryptographic software written
718 by Eric Young (eay@cryptsoft.com).