Windows NT Does Not Provide Bootstrap Protocol (BOOTP) ServiceID: Q124584
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Although Windows NT provides dynamic host configuration protocol (DHCP)
services, and DHCP is based on the Bootstrap protocol (BOOTP), Windows NT
does not provide BOOTP services.
NOTE: The latest Microsoft Windows NT version 4.0 U.S. Service Pack adds
some BOOTP functionality to the Microsoft DHCP Server component. For
additional information, please see the README.TXT file included with the
Service Pack, or see the following article in the Microsoft Knowledge Base:
Q152841: Windows NT 4.0 Service Pack 3 Readme.txt File (40-bit)
Windows NT uses DHCP to retrieve information from a DHCP server, but does
not retrieve information directly related to diskless booting, nor does it
provide BOOTP services to manage and initiate diskless booting.
BOOTP, as defined in RFC 951 (with clarifications and extensions applied in
RFC 1542), is both a service and a protocol (used to implement the
service). The BOOTP service allows a diskless client to access the BOOTP
server host to determine (using programmable read-only memory [PROM] code),
its own IP address, the address of a BOOTP server host, and boot file to
load into memory. The diskless client can then boot itself.
Windows NT does not provide BOOTP server code to locate and indicate (to
the diskless client) an NT boot image file, nor does it provide services to
allow a BOOTP client to boot Windows NT.
Additional query words: prodnt
Keywords : kbnetwork ntprotocol NTSrv
Version : 3.5 4.0
Platform : winnt
Issue type :
Last Reviewed: February 18, 1999