Limitations Creating DHCP Reservations
ID: Q196066
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The information in this article applies to:
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Microsoft Windows NT Server version 4.0
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Microsoft Windows NT Server, Enterprise Edition version 4.0
SUMMARY
DHCP manager will allow certain DHCP reservations outside the DHCP scope
range but will deny if they are outside the subnet range. Several rules
must apply when creating reservations.
MORE INFORMATION
The DHCP server must service the subnet where the reservation is being
created.
These three rules will guide you in creating reservations:
- You may create a reservation within any scope range.
- You may create a reservation within a subnet range even if the
reservation falls outside the actual scope Start and End addresses for
that subnet.
- You cannot create reservations outside the subnet range of any of your
existing scopes.
As a simple example, take a DHCP server with no existing scopes:
- Let's say you have a standard Class C subnet for 192.168.1.0 with mask
255.255.255.0.
- You can create a scope for the first half of the subnet so the scope has
a starting address of 192.168.1.1 and an ending address of
192.168.1.150.
- You can now create a reservation for the address 192.168.1.25. (Rule 1)
- You can also create a reservation that lies outside the scope but still
within the subnet range; for example, reserve 192.168.1.200. (Rule 2)
- You cannot create a reservation for the address 192.168.2.4, which lies
outside the subnet of any existing scope. (Rule 3)
Additional query words:
kbDSupport
Keywords : kbnetwork
Version : WinNT:4.0
Platform : winnt
Issue type : kbinfo
Last Reviewed: February 24, 1999