03-22-2024 07:02 AM
Hello,
hope someone help me,
we have created a vlan on a meraki core switch with /27 subnet, and the lease time is set to 1 week, i change the least time to 24 hours, how long it will take to replenish the IP after i changes the least time from 1 week to 24 hrs?
thank you!
03-22-2024 07:08 AM
Only after the IP lease time already granted to the client has been reset, in other words 1 week.
03-22-2024 07:12 AM
You can force clients to renew their IP with the commands ipconfig /release and ipconfig /renew
03-22-2024 07:21 AM
@alessandrodematos
sorry incomplete info that vlan is not via LAN its assign on a unifi access point on 1 of our SSID, already release and renew also rebooted the nearest AP, or i just need to wait a little longer?
thank you for the help sir
03-22-2024 07:24 AM
This is irrelevant, the correct thing would be to clear the entries in the DHCP bind, which is not possible on Meraki, meaning you will have to wait 1 week.
03-22-2024 07:32 AM
@alessandrodematos thank you for the enlightenment sir, will just wait
03-22-2024 09:58 AM
I think that it should actually be less than that, if the DHCP lease is 1 week, then the client will check in about half way through and if the lease time has been reduced to 1 day then you could expect something like 4 days in total.
03-22-2024 10:03 AM
No, once the IP is assigned with the lease that was initially configured, it is necessary to wait for it to expire. I've already tested it in practice, it's the expected behavior.
03-22-2024 11:58 AM
If you disable the DHCP server and enable it again, all DHCP bindings should be cleared.
03-22-2024 12:31 PM
i wanted to try this one but cannot interrupt the end users
03-23-2024 03:40 PM
>i change the least time to 24 hours, how long it will take
After 0 days 0% of the leases are statistically likely to be released.
After 3.5 days 50% of the leases are statistically likely to be released.
After 7 days 100% of the leases are statistically likely to be released.
Do you see the trend?
It's a bit nasty, but what you can also do is turn off the DHCP server in Meraki, save, and then turn it on again, save. Voila the DHCP database is now wiped. IP address conflict resolution should save you from most dramas. A couple of devices are bound to end up with a conflict, but a large chunk of things will work.
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