[vox] Speakers needed!
Karsten M. Self
kmself at ix.netcom.com
Wed Apr 6 18:04:31 PDT 2005
on Sat, Mar 26, 2005 at 02:00:38PM -0800, Ryan (cjg5ehir02 at sneakemail.com) wrote:
> I'd be willing and able to do a talk covering ISC DHCP any time, if there's
> intrest.
>
> What'd I'd cover.
> * basic usage
> * vendor defined options
> * static address assignments via DHCP
> * custom dhclient scripts
> * dynamic dns w/ bind (possibly)
> * serving multiple subnets
> * client groups
Here's a selfish interest. The more so as I'm not too likely to make
the meeting, but should be useful to others.
I'd like to do a LTSP deployment at a local school. However, there is
an existing DHCP infrastructure in place. I've been looking at this
from a few angles for a couple of weeks, and:
- LTSP uses DHCP and BOOTP by default. Other thin-client solutions
would do similarly.
- BOOTP and DHCP are actually permutations of the same protocol --
same port, same protocol, slightly different headers. For the
interested (yes, *you*), BOOTP apparently arose first, then vendors
started piling on extensions to the protocol when they realized that
automatic IP assignment, even when not network-booting, was useful.
- Note that dhclient can be told to make its requests on a specified
port other than the default (67/68). Presumably this can be done
for BOOTP requests as well, with some tweakage.
- (Maybe) the BOOTP and DHCP functions can be seperated (allowing boot
requests to be handled by the LTSP server, and DHCP requests by the
extant DHCP server).
- ...or: BOOTP and DHCP can be handled by the LTSP server, keyed to a
specific port, and (optionally) specific MACs, allowing coexistence
in a mixed environment.
Actually, this is probably *way* beyond what Ryan has any interest in
discussing, but, damnit, _I_ care (and people like me).
Informed (or otherwise) feedback welcomed.
Peace.
--
Karsten M. Self <kmself at ix.netcom.com> http://kmself.home.netcom.com/
What Part of "Gestalt" don't you understand?
One should remember that the Universe is large enough that unlikely
things happen really quite often.
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