Dhcp server, Dhcp relay agent, Dhcp snooping – Dell POWEREDGE M1000E User Manual

Page 544

Advertising
background image

22-2

Cisco Catalyst Blade Switch 3130 and 3032 for Dell Software Configuration Guide

OL-13270-03

Chapter 22 Configuring DHCP Features and IP Source Guard

Understanding DHCP Features

DHCP Snooping and Switch Stacks, page 22-7

Cisco IOS DHCP Server Database, page 22-6

DHCP Snooping Binding Database, page 22-6

For information about the DHCP client, see the “Configuring DHCP” section of the “IP Addressing and
Services
” section of the Cisco IOS IP Configuration Guide, Release 12.2.

DHCP Server

The DHCP server assigns IP addresses from specified address pools on a switch or router to DHCP
clients and manages them. If the DHCP server cannot give the DHCP client the requested configuration
parameters from its database, it forwards the request to one or more secondary DHCP servers defined
by the network administrator.

DHCP Relay Agent

A DHCP relay agent is a Layer 3 device that forwards DHCP packets between clients and servers. Relay
agents forward requests and replies between clients and servers when they are not on the same physical
subnet. Relay agent forwarding is different from the normal Layer 2 forwarding, in which IP datagrams
are switched transparently between networks. Relay agents receive DHCP messages and generate new
DHCP messages to send on output interfaces.

DHCP Snooping

DHCP snooping is a DHCP security feature that provides network security by filtering untrusted DHCP
messages and by building and maintaining a DHCP snooping binding database, also referred to as a
DHCP snooping binding table. For more information about this database, see the

“Displaying DHCP

Snooping Information” section on page 22-16

.

DHCP snooping acts like a firewall between untrusted hosts and DHCP servers. You use DHCP
snooping to differentiate between untrusted interfaces connected to the end user and trusted interfaces
connected to the DHCP server or another switch.

Note

For DHCP snooping to function properly, all DHCP servers must be connected to the switch through
trusted interfaces.

An untrusted DHCP message is a message that is received from outside the network or firewall. When
you use DHCP snooping in a service-provider environment, an untrusted message is sent from a device
that is not in the service-provider network, such as a customer’s switch. Messages from unknown
devices are untrusted because they can be sources of traffic attacks.

The DHCP snooping binding database has the MAC address, the IP address, the lease time, the binding
type, the VLAN number, and the interface information that corresponds to the local untrusted interfaces
of a switch. It does not have information regarding hosts interconnected with a trusted interface.

In a service-provider network, a trusted interface is connected to a port on a device in the same network.
An untrusted interface is connected to an untrusted interface in the network or to an interface on a device
that is not in the network.

Advertising