Introduction To Dhcp Snooping - 3Com 5500-SI Configuration Manual

5500 series
Hide thumbs Also See for 5500-SI:
Table of Contents

Advertisement

290
C
17: N
HAPTER
ETWORK
Introduction to DHCP
Snooping
P
O
ROTOCOL
PERATION
6 Return to system view.
[S5500-vlan-interface 100] quit
7 Enable option 82 supporting on the DHCP relay, with the keep keyword specified.
[S5500] dhcp relay information enable
[S5500] dhcp relay information strategy keep
For the sake of security, the IP addresses used by online DHCP clients need to be
tracked for the administrator to verify the corresponding relationship between the IP
addresses the DHCP clients obtained from DHCP servers and the MAC addresses of
the DHCP clients.
Layer 3 switches can track DHCP client IP addresses through DHCP relay.
Layer 2 switches can track DHCP client IP addresses through the DHCP snooping
function, which listens DHCP broadcast packets.
When an unauthorized DHCP server exists in the network, a DHCP client may obtains
an illegal IP address. To ensure that the DHCP clients obtain IP addresses from valid
DHCP servers, you can specify a port to be a trusted port or an untrusted port by the
DHCP snooping function.
Trusted ports can be used to connect DHCP servers or ports of other switches.
Untrusted ports can be used to connect DHCP clients or networks.
Trusted ports forward any received DHCP packets to ensure that DHCP clients can
obtain IP addresses from valid DHCP servers. Untrusted ports discard the
DHCP-ACK and DHCP-OFFER responses received from DHCP servers.
Figure 70 illustrates a typical network diagram for DHCP snooping application, where
Switch A is an S5500 series switch.
Figure 70 Typical network diagram for DHCP snooping application
Figure 71 illustrates the interaction between a DHCP client and a DHCP server

Hide quick links:

Advertisement

Table of Contents
loading

This manual is also suitable for:

5500-ei5500g-ei

Table of Contents