OPS235 Lab 8 - Fedora17
Revision as of 15:49, 24 March 2010 by Brian.gray (talk | contribs)
Contents
- 1 Install and Configure a DHCP Server
- 1.1 Objectives
- 1.2 Reference
- 1.3 Required materials
- 1.4 Lab Preparation
- 1.5 Completing the Lab
- 1.5.1 Investigation 1: How do you install the DHCP Server.
- 1.5.2 Investigation 2: What configuration options and directives need to be set in dhcpd.conf?
- 1.5.3 Investigation 3: How do I configure dhcpd settings to be applied to all subnets?
- 1.5.4 Investigation 4: How do I configure dhcpd to provide IP configuration to my virtual network?
Install and Configure a DHCP Server
Objectives
- To install, configure, and test ISC's DHCP Server
Reference
- man pages for dhcpd, dhcpd.conf, dhcpd.leases, dhcp-options, dhclient, dhclient-conf
- Fedora DHCP Configuration Guide
- Internet Software Consortium DHCP page
Required materials
- Fedora 12 Live CD or a classmate on the same pod
- One SATA hard disk in a removable drive tray with Fedora host and 3 Fedora Virtual Machines installed
- Completion of Lab 6
Lab Preparation
Completing the Lab
Investigation 1: How do you install the DHCP Server.
- To check that you have
dhclient
installed, enter the command:-
rpm -q dhclient
-
- If the package is not installed, you will get the message "package dhclient is not installed", otherwise, you will get the version information of the rpm package. Install the
dhclient
package if it was not installed. - Check to see if the
dhcp
server package is installed. - Follow the normal procedure to install the DHCP server rpm package called
dhcp
usingyum
. - Enter the command to list all the files installed from the DHCP server package.
- What file appears to be a sample configuration file?
- Copy the sample
dhcpd.conf
file to the/etc/dhcp
directory making sure it is named/etc/dhcp/dhcpd.conf
- Answer the Investigation 1 question in your log book.
Investigation 2: What configuration options and directives need to be set in dhcpd.conf?
- Study the man pages of
dhcpd
,dhcpd.conf
,dhcp-options
, anddhcpd.leases
and make notes in your log book. In particular, look up the meaning and possible value(s), if any, for the following configuration options:-
broadcast-address
-
default-lease-time
-
max-lease-time
(How is this different fromdefault-lease-time
?) -
domain-name
-
domain-name-servers
-
fixed-address
-
group
-
hardware
-
host
-
host-name
-
range
-
routers
-
subnet
-
subnet-mask
-
- Study the sample
dhcpd.conf
file to see examples of how these options are used. - Answer the Investigation 2 question in your log book.
Investigation 3: How do I configure dhcpd settings to be applied to all subnets?
- Edit
/etc/dhcp/dhcpd.conf
and examine the top section of the file. - Make the following changes to the global settings:
-
domain-name
should be set to "ops235.org" -
domain-name-servers
should be set to 192.168.235.1 -
default-lease-time
should be set to 20 minutes -
max-lease-time
should be set to 1 hour
-
- Answer the Investigation 3 question in your log book.
Investigation 4: How do I configure dhcpd to provide IP configuration to my virtual network?
- Edit
/etc/dhcp/dhcpd.conf
and add a new subnet delcaration for your virtual network - The network address is 192.168.235.0/255.255.255.0 and the range of host addresses should be from 51 to 60
- Also add a default gateway for the virtual network of 192.168.235.1
- Save the file and attempt to start the
dhcpd
service.