12-07-2006 10:49 AM - edited 03-03-2019 02:57 PM
Hello,
Let's say I have the segment 172.25.96.0/24 for a Lan.
I have two routers(1711) in this lan using hsrp and 1 virtual router for the gateway.
How can I separate the segment in my dhcp configuration on both routers in order to have ip resolution when one router is down.
Thank you for your help.
12-07-2006 12:24 PM
The way to achieve this is to configure each router with a DHCP pool that is half of the pool that you intend to use. Each router will offer addresses out of its pool. With both routers active when a client sends a DHCP request it will receive a response from both routers and will choose which offer to accept. You will probably wind up with some clients using addresses from router A and some clients using addresses from router B. With one router down the other router will still offer addresses.
HTH
Rick
12-07-2006 12:56 PM
Hi,
The biggest drawback of DHCP is that there is no synchornization between different DHCP Servers, hence if you want to deploy more than 1 server, its always a challange.
Different OS vendors address it differently, by the way, if you have Windows ADS, then the best way is to incorporate it through the DC or ADCs.
However if you are not interested using any OS, then , the best strategy would be to divide the Scope / Pool between 2 servers (in your case Routers) and let both the routers assign the IP Addresses independantly, so that in case of one Router's failure the second Router would be able to take care of the situation.
A second but less preferred idea would be to assign a longer lease period e.g. 15 days lease period, during which the existing clients won't run out of options and if there are any new clients, you can assign them manually.
HTH,
Regards,
Wilson Samuel
12-08-2006 06:13 AM
How would you divide the scope/pool between the 2 routers? I cannot find the way to enter it in the config. What command should I use?
12-08-2006 10:04 AM
There is not a special command. You just put half the range into the pool on one router and the other half of the range into the pool of the other router. To do it your configs might look something like this (assume that you want 10.6.2.0/24 to be the pool of addresses for DHCP):
on routerA
ip dhcp pool DHCP_A
network 10.6.2.0 255.255.255.128
on routerB
ip dhcp pool DHCP_B
network 10.6.2.128 255.255.255.128
HTH
Rick
Discover and save your favorite ideas. Come back to expert answers, step-by-step guides, recent topics, and more.
New here? Get started with these tips. How to use Community New member guide