Dhcp – Sierra Wireless Overdrive User Manual

Page 106

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98 Settings

DHCP IP Address Range

— The starting and ending address of the range of IP addresses available

for the device to dynamically (that is, not permanently) assign to computers connected to it.

DHCP Lease Time

— Amount of time, in minutes, a computer can use its assigned IP address before

it is required to renew the lease. After this time is up, the computer is automatically assigned a new
dynamic IP address.

Enter a number between 2 and 10080.

Max DHCP Clients

— The number of DHCP addresses that can be assigned and active at one time.

It’s recommended you set this to a number greater than the number of Wi-Fi users.

DNS Mode

— Specifies how the DNS servers (that the DHCP clients are to communicate with) are

obtained.

Auto

: Use the DNS server specified by Sprint.

DNS Relay

is enabled by default.

Manual

: The routing hardware assigns DHCP clients the DNS servers specified in the

Manual

DNS Server #1

and

#2

fields.

Use this option to access a DNS server that provides customized addressing or if you have a
local DNS server on your network.

If

DNS Relay

is disabled, the routing hardware rejects DNS requests targeting the internal

DNS proxy.

Static IP addresses to use for the DNS servers (if

DNS Mode

is Manual). (

Manual DNS Server #1

and

#2

)

Available only if

DNS Mode

is Manual.

DNS Relay

— If enabled, and if

DNS Mode

(see above) is Manual, the routing hardware assigns

DHCP clients the DNS servers specified in the

Manual DNS Server #1

and

#2

fields.

If disabled, the routing hardware rejects DNS requests targeting the internal DNS proxy.

The

DNS Relay

field is configurable and displayed only if

DNS Mode

is Manual. If

DNS Mode

is Auto,

DNS Relay is enabled by default.

Assign a permanent IP address to a MAC address, and view the static IP assignment list. See
“DHCP Static IP Assignment List” on page 99.

DHCP

DHCP (Dynamic Host Control Protocol) automatically assigns an IP address to each device on the
network and manages other network configuration information for devices connected to your network.
You do not need to manually configure the IP address on each device that’s on your network.

The assigned IP addresses are not permanent (as opposed to when using static IP).

Most ISPs (Internet Service Providers) use DHCP.

Normally, you should enable DHCP, in which case you must configure each device on the network
with one of the following:

TCP/IP settings set to “Obtain an IP address automatically”.

TCP/IP bound to the Ethernet connection with DHCP.

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