Deployment Guide

Table Of Contents
DHCP Client on a Management Interface
These conditions apply when you enable a management interface to operate as a DHCP client.
The management default route is added with the gateway as the router IP address received in the DHCP ACK packet. It
is required to send and receive traffic to and from other subnets on the external network. The route is added irrespective
when the DHCP client and server are in the same or different subnets. The management default route is deleted if the
management IP address is released like other DHCP client management routes.
ip route for 0.0.0.0 takes precedence if it is present or added later.
Management routes added by a DHCP client display with Route Source as DHCP in the show ip management route
and show ip management-route dynamic command output.
Management routes added by DHCP are automatically reinstalled if you configure a static IP route with the ip route
command that replaces a management route added by the DHCP client. If you remove the statically configured IP route
using the no ip route command, the management route is reinstalled. Manually delete management routes added by the
DHCP client.
To reinstall management routes added by the DHCP client that is removed or replaced by the same statically configured
management routes, release the DHCP IP address and renew it on the management interface.
Management routes added by the DHCP client have higher precedence over the same statically configured management
route. Static routes are not removed from the running configuration if a dynamically acquired management route added by
the DHCP client overwrites a static management route.
Management routes added by the DHCP client are not added to the running configuration.
NOTE: Management routes added by the DHCP client include the specific routes to reach a DHCP server in a different
subnet and the management route.
DHCP Client Operation with Other Features
The DHCP client operates with other Dell EMC Networking OS features, as the following describes.
Stacking
The DHCP client daemon runs only on the master unit and handles all DHCP packet transactions. It periodically synchronizes the
lease file with the standby unit.
When a stack failover occurs, the new master requires the same DHCP server-assigned IP address on DHCP client interfaces.
The new master reinitiates a DHCP packet transaction by sending a DHCP discovery packet on nonbound interfaces.
Virtual Link Trunking (VLT)
A DHCP client is not supported on VLT interfaces.
VLAN and Port Channels
DHCP client configuration and behavior are the same on Virtual LAN (VLAN) and port-channel (LAG) interfaces as on a physical
interface.
DHCP Snooping
A DHCP client can run on a switch simultaneously with the DHCP snooping feature as follows:
If you enable DHCP snooping globally on a switch and you enable a DHCP client on an interface, the trust port, source MAC
address, and snooping table validations are not performed on the interface by DHCP snooping for packets destined to the
DHCP client daemon.
The following criteria determine packets destined for the DHCP client:
DHCP is enabled on the interface.
The user data protocol (UDP) destination port in the packet is 68.
The chaddr (change address) in the DHCP header of the packet is the same as the interfaces MAC address.
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Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol (DHCP)