01-19-2006 09:30 AM - edited 03-03-2019 11:30 AM
We have a Cisco 1720 connected to a T1 between two of our offices (point-to-point) for file sharing and all that good stuff.
The problem is that we both use the same range/class of IP addresses so Location #1 is running a DHCP server and Location #2 is configured statically for 25 hosts. We want to be able to run DHCP server in both locations without the network accidently picking up leases from the wrong location.
The easiest way I can think of is by blocking the DHCP ports (67/68) on the router so it won't go over the T1.
Anyone know how to do this on the Cisco 1720 router? I have no idea on how to work the internals b/c it doesn't seem to have a web-based administration.
01-19-2006 10:33 AM
your router should not pass dhcp requests from one network to the other w/o the 'ip helper-address' command. dhcp is a broadcast technology, routers do not forward broadcasts by default.
01-19-2006 02:03 PM
It is because we have Network Bridging enabled on the the Point-to-Point, so that both networks appear as one. Which is what the original problem was in having us block the DHCP ports on the Cisco router.
01-19-2006 03:32 PM
Hi Daniel,
When you run bridging between interfaces, you cannot apply layer 3 (or, in your case layer 4) access-lists to filter out traffic, since the router switches based on the MAC addresses and does not look beyond that.
You can, however, filter based on the MAC address, but this will filter all traffic to/from the server. If that is what you want, let us know ...
Hope that helps - pls rate the post if it does.
Regards,
Paresh
Paresh
01-19-2006 07:03 PM
why not just use one dhcp server? or, put a dhcp server in each location, w/ different ranges of addresses (but still in the same subnet).
Is there a reason your point-to-point is configured in bridging mode?
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