Checklist: Administering a DHCP server
Applies To: Windows Server 2003, Windows Server 2003 R2, Windows Server 2003 with SP1, Windows Server 2003 with SP2
Checklist: Administering a DHCP server
The following table lists optional actions you can take to administer your DHCP server, depending on your network configuration.
Step | Reference |
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If clients share a commonly defined vendor type or a common need for a unique DHCP options configuration, configure and assign option classes. |
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If predefined options do not meet your needs, define additional option types. |
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If the default lease time of eight days is too long or too short, adjust the length of lease durations. For example, you can shorten leases for wireless clients on wireless subnets, or lengthen leases for subnets whose DHCP clients all have reservations. |
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If you need to implement support for more than one logical network for each physical network, create and use superscopes. |
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If you have a routed network, determine if you need to implement relay agents or update routers, and if so, review relay agent configurations and related design issues. |
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If you want to deploy your DHCP server as a multicast server, create multicast scopes. |
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If you want to support BOOTP clients on your network, configure the BOOTP table. |
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If DHCP clients have problems accessing network resources, verify DHCP service to clients. |
Verify, release, or renew a client address lease; Ipconfig; Command-line utilities |
If you want to manually configure IP addresses for clients running Windows 2000, Windows XP, or Windows Server 2003 family, disable automatic address configuration. |
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If you want to track DHCP server performance, use System Monitor. |
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If you want to allow users to have read-only or administrative access to the DHCP server, add users to DHCP groups. |
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If you are having DHCP-related problems, troubleshoot and resolve common DHCP-related problems, or review DHCP server audit log files. |