The syntax of the
dhcpd
command is:
dhcpd
[
-p
port
] [
-f
] [
-d
] [
-cf
config-file
] [
-lf
lease-file
] [
if0
[...
ifn
]]
dhcpd
usually is run without any command-line arguments. Most of
the arguments are used only when testing and debugging. Two of the
command-line arguments handle special configuration requirements:
-
-f
-
Runs
dhcpd
in foreground mode. By default,
dhcpd
runs as
a background daemon process. Use
-f
when
dhcpd
is started
from
inittab
on a System V UNIX system.
-
if0
[...
ifn
]
-
Lists the interfaces on which
dhcpd
should listen for BOOTREQUEST
packets. This is a whitespace-separated list of interface names.
For example,
dhcpd ec0 ec1 wd0
tells
dhcpd
to listen to
interfaces ec0, ec1, and wd0. Normally this argument is not required.
In most cases
dhcpd
locates all installed interfaces and eliminates
the non-broadcast interfaces automatically. Use this argument only if
it appears that
dhcpd
is failing to locate the correct interfaces.
All of the remaining command-line arguments are used for debugging
or testing:
-
-p
port
-
Causes
dhcpd
to listen to a non-standard port. The well-known port
for DHCP is 67. Changing it means that clients cannot talk to the server.
On rare occasions this is done during testing.
-
-d
-
Routes error messages to stderr. Normally error messages are written
via syslog with facility set to DAEMON.
-
-cf
config-file
-
Causes
dhcpd
to read the configuration from the file identified
by
config-file
instead of from
dhcpd.conf
. Use this only
to test a new configuration before it is installed in
dhcpd.conf
.
Use the standard file for production.
-
-lf
lease-file
-
Causes
dhcpd
to write the address lease information to the file
identified by
lease-file
instead of to
dhcpd.leases
. Use this
only for testing. Changing the name of the lease file could cause dynamic
addresses to be misallocated. Use this argument with caution.
Kill the
dhcpd
daemon with the SIGTERM signal. The process ID (PID)
of the
dhcpd
daemon is found in the
/var/run/dhcpd.pid
file.
For example:
# kill -TERM 'cat /var/run/dhcpd.pid'
dhcpd
uses three files.
dhcpd
writes its PID to
/var/run/dhcpd.pid
.
It maintains a record of dynamic address leases
in
/var/db/dhcpd.leases
, and
dhcpd
reads its configuration
from
/etc/dhcpd.conf
. These last two files are created by you.
Create an empty lease file before you run
dhcpd
the first time,
e.g.,
touch /var/db/dhcpd.leases
. Create a configuration and
store it in
dhcpd.conf
.