1.\" $OpenBSD: dhclient.conf.5,v 1.5 2004/11/01 23:10:18 henning Exp $ 2.\" 3.\" Copyright (c) 1997 The Internet Software Consortium. 4.\" All rights reserved. 5.\" 6.\" Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without 7.\" modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions 8.\" are met: 9.\" 10.\" 1. Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright 11.\" notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer. 12.\" 2. Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright 13.\" notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the 14.\" documentation and/or other materials provided with the distribution. 15.\" 3. Neither the name of The Internet Software Consortium nor the names 16.\" of its contributors may be used to endorse or promote products derived 17.\" from this software without specific prior written permission. 18.\" 19.\" THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE INTERNET SOFTWARE CONSORTIUM AND 20.\" CONTRIBUTORS ``AS IS'' AND ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, 21.\" INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF 22.\" MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE ARE 23.\" DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE INTERNET SOFTWARE CONSORTIUM OR 24.\" CONTRIBUTORS BE LIABLE FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, 25.\" SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT 26.\" LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS OR SERVICES; LOSS OF 27.\" USE, DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION) HOWEVER CAUSED AND 28.\" ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY, 29.\" OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT 30.\" OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF 31.\" SUCH DAMAGE. 32.\" 33.\" This software has been written for the Internet Software Consortium 34.\" by Ted Lemon <mellon@fugue.com> in cooperation with Vixie 35.\" Enterprises. To learn more about the Internet Software Consortium, 36.\" see ``http://www.isc.org/isc''. To learn more about Vixie 37.\" Enterprises, see ``http://www.vix.com''. 38.\" 39.Dd March 17, 2023 40.Dt DHCLIENT.CONF 5 41.Os 42.Sh NAME 43.Nm dhclient.conf 44.Nd DHCP client configuration file 45.Sh DESCRIPTION 46The 47.Nm 48file contains configuration information for 49.Xr dhclient 8 , 50the Internet Software Consortium DHCP Client. 51.Pp 52The 53.Nm 54file is a free-form ASCII text file. 55It is parsed by the recursive-descent parser built into 56.Xr dhclient 8 . 57The file may contain extra tabs and newlines for formatting purposes. 58Keywords in the file are case-insensitive. 59Comments may be placed anywhere within the file (except within quotes). 60Comments begin with the 61.Ql # 62character and end at the end of the line. 63.Pp 64The 65.Nm 66file can be used to configure the behaviour of the client in a wide variety 67of ways: protocol timing, information requested from the server, information 68required of the server, defaults to use if the server does not provide 69certain information, values with which to override information provided by 70the server, or values to prepend or append to information provided by the 71server. 72The configuration file can also be preinitialized with addresses to 73use on networks that do not have DHCP servers. 74.Sh PROTOCOL TIMING 75The timing behaviour of the client need not be configured by the user. 76If no timing configuration is provided by the user, a fairly 77reasonable timing behaviour will be used by default - one which 78results in fairly timely updates without placing an inordinate load on 79the server. 80.Pp 81The following statements can be used to adjust the timing behaviour of 82the DHCP client if required, however: 83.Bl -tag -width indent 84.It Ic timeout Ar time ; 85The 86.Ic timeout 87statement determines the amount of time that must pass between the 88time that the client begins to try to determine its address and the 89time that it decides that it is not going to be able to contact a server. 90By default, this timeout is sixty seconds. 91After the timeout has passed, if there are any static leases defined in the 92configuration file, or any leases remaining in the lease database that 93have not yet expired, the client will loop through these leases 94attempting to validate them, and if it finds one that appears to be 95valid, it will use that lease's address. 96If there are no valid static leases or unexpired leases in the lease database, 97the client will restart the protocol after the defined retry interval. 98.It Ic retry Ar time ; 99The 100.Ic retry 101statement determines the time that must pass after the client has 102determined that there is no DHCP server present before it tries again 103to contact a DHCP server. 104By default, this is five minutes. 105.It Ic select-timeout Ar time ; 106It is possible (some might say desirable) for there to be more than 107one DHCP server serving any given network. 108In this case, it is possible that a client may be sent more than one offer 109in response to its initial lease discovery message. 110It may be that one of these offers is preferable to the other 111(e.g., one offer may have the address the client previously used, 112and the other may not). 113.Pp 114The 115.Ic select-timeout 116is the time after the client sends its first lease discovery request 117at which it stops waiting for offers from servers, assuming that it 118has received at least one such offer. 119If no offers have been received by the time the 120.Ic select-timeout 121has expired, the client will accept the first offer that arrives. 122.Pp 123By default, the 124.Ic select-timeout 125is zero seconds - that is, the client will take the first offer it sees. 126.It Ic reboot Ar time ; 127When the client is restarted, it first tries to reacquire the last 128address it had. 129This is called the INIT-REBOOT state. 130If it is still attached to the same network it was attached to when it last 131ran, this is the quickest way to get started. 132The 133.Ic reboot 134statement sets the time that must elapse after the client first tries 135to reacquire its old address before it gives up and tries to discover 136a new address. 137By default, the reboot timeout is ten seconds. 138.It Ic backoff-cutoff Ar time ; 139The client uses an exponential backoff algorithm with some randomness, 140so that if many clients try to configure themselves at the same time, 141they will not make their requests in lockstep. 142The 143.Ic backoff-cutoff 144statement determines the maximum amount of time that the client is 145allowed to back off. 146It defaults to two minutes. 147.It Ic initial-interval Ar time ; 148The 149.Ic initial-interval 150statement sets the amount of time between the first attempt to reach a 151server and the second attempt to reach a server. 152Each time a message is sent, the interval between messages is incremented by 153twice the current interval multiplied by a random number between zero and one. 154If it is greater than the 155.Ic backoff-cutoff 156amount, it is set to that 157amount. 158It defaults to ten seconds. 159.El 160.Sh LEASE REQUIREMENTS AND REQUESTS 161The DHCP protocol allows the client to request that the server send it 162specific information, and not send it other information that it is not 163prepared to accept. 164The protocol also allows the client to reject offers from servers if they 165do not contain information the client needs, or if the information provided 166is not satisfactory. 167.Pp 168There is a variety of data contained in offers that DHCP servers send 169to DHCP clients. 170The data that can be specifically requested is what are called 171.Em DHCP Options . 172DHCP Options are defined in 173.Xr dhcp-options 5 . 174.Bl -tag -width indent 175.It Ic request Oo Ar option Oc Oo , Ar ... option Oc ; 176The 177.Ic request 178statement causes the client to request that any server responding to the 179client send the client its values for the specified options. 180Only the option names should be specified in the request statement - not 181option parameters. 182.It Ic require Oo Ar option Oc Oo , Ar ... option Oc ; 183The 184.Ic require 185statement lists options that must be sent in order for an offer to be accepted. 186Offers that do not contain all the listed options will be ignored. 187.It Ic send No { Oo Ar option declaration Oc Oo , Ar ... option declaration Oc } 188The 189.Ic send 190statement causes the client to send the specified options to the server with 191the specified values. 192These are full option declarations as described in 193.Xr dhcp-options 5 . 194Options that are always sent in the DHCP protocol should not be specified 195here, except that the client can specify a 196.Ar dhcp-lease-time 197option other than the default requested lease time, which is two hours. 198The other obvious use for this statement is to send information to the server 199that will allow it to differentiate between this client and other 200clients or kinds of clients. 201.It Ic ignore Oo Ar option Oc Oo , Ar ... option Oc ; 202The 203.Ic ignore 204statement causes the client to disregard the specified options in any offer 205received, as though the server had never sent them at all. 206.El 207.Sh OPTION MODIFIERS 208In some cases, a client may receive option data from the server which 209is not really appropriate for that client, or may not receive 210information that it needs, and for which a useful default value exists. 211It may also receive information which is useful, but which needs to be 212supplemented with local information. 213To handle these needs, several option modifiers are available. 214.Bl -tag -width indent 215.It Xo 216.Ic default No { Op Ar option declaration 217.Oo , Ar ... option declaration Oc } 218.Xc 219If for some set of options the client should use the value supplied by 220the server, but needs to use some default value if no value was supplied 221by the server, these values can be defined in the 222.Ic default 223statement. 224.It Xo 225.Ic supersede No { Op Ar option declaration 226.Oo , Ar ... option declaration Oc } 227.Xc 228If for some set of options the client should always use its own value 229rather than any value supplied by the server, these values can be defined 230in the 231.Ic supersede 232statement. 233.Pp 234Some options values have special meaning: 235.Bl -tag -width indent 236.It Ar interface-mtu 237Any server-supplied interface MTU is ignored by the client if a 238.Ic supersede 239zero value is configured. 240.El 241.It Xo 242.Ic prepend No { Op Ar option declaration 243.Oo , Ar ... option declaration Oc } 244.Xc 245If for some set of options the client should use a value you supply, 246and then use the values supplied by the server, if any, 247these values can be defined in the 248.Ic prepend 249statement. 250The 251.Ic prepend 252statement can only be used for options which allow more than one value to 253be given. 254This restriction is not enforced - if violated, the results are unpredictable. 255.It Xo 256.Ic append No { Op Ar option declaration 257.Oo , Ar ... option declaration Oc } 258.Xc 259If for some set of options the client should first use the values 260supplied by the server, if any, and then use values you supply, these 261values can be defined in the 262.Ic append 263statement. 264The 265.Ic append 266statement can only be used for options which allow more than one value to 267be given. 268This restriction is not enforced - if you ignore it, 269the behaviour will be unpredictable. 270.El 271.Sh LEASE DECLARATIONS 272The lease declaration: 273.Pp 274.D1 Ic lease No { Ar lease-declaration Oo Ar ... lease-declaration Oc } 275.Pp 276The DHCP client may decide after some period of time (see 277.Sx PROTOCOL TIMING ) 278that it is not going to succeed in contacting a server. 279At that time, it consults its own database of old leases and tests each one 280that has not yet timed out by pinging the listed router for that lease to 281see if that lease could work. 282It is possible to define one or more 283.Em fixed 284leases in the client configuration file for networks where there is no DHCP 285or BOOTP service, so that the client can still automatically configure its 286address. 287This is done with the 288.Ic lease 289statement. 290.Pp 291NOTE: the lease statement is also used in the 292.Pa dhclient.leases 293file in order to record leases that have been received from DHCP servers. 294Some of the syntax for leases as described below is only needed in the 295.Pa dhclient.leases 296file. 297Such syntax is documented here for completeness. 298.Pp 299A lease statement consists of the 300.Ic lease 301keyword, followed by a left 302curly brace, followed by one or more lease declaration statements, 303followed by a right curly brace. 304The following lease declarations are possible: 305.Bl -tag -width indent 306.It Ic bootp ; 307The 308.Ic bootp 309statement is used to indicate that the lease was acquired using the 310BOOTP protocol rather than the DHCP protocol. 311It is never necessary to specify this in the client configuration file. 312The client uses this syntax in its lease database file. 313.It Ic interface Qq Ar string ; 314The 315.Ic interface 316lease statement is used to indicate the interface on which the lease is valid. 317If set, this lease will only be tried on a particular interface. 318When the client receives a lease from a server, it always records the 319interface number on which it received that lease. 320If predefined leases are specified in the 321.Nm 322file, the interface should also be specified, although this is not required. 323.It Ic fixed-address Ar ip-address ; 324The 325.Ic fixed-address 326statement is used to set the IP address of a particular lease. 327This is required for all lease statements. 328The IP address must be specified as a dotted quad (e.g., 329.Li 12.34.56.78 ) . 330.It Ic filename Qq Ar string ; 331The 332.Ic filename 333statement specifies the name of the boot filename to use. 334This is not used by the standard client configuration script, but is 335included for completeness. 336.It Ic server-name Qq Ar string ; 337The 338.Ic server-name 339statement specifies the name of the boot server name to use. 340This is also not used by the standard client configuration script. 341.It Ic option Ar option-declaration ; 342The 343.Ic option 344statement is used to specify the value of an option supplied by the server, 345or, in the case of predefined leases declared in 346.Nm , 347the value that the user wishes the client configuration script to use if the 348predefined lease is used. 349.It Ic script Qq Ar script-name ; 350The 351.Ic script 352statement is used to specify the pathname of the DHCP client configuration 353script. 354This script is used by the DHCP client to set each interface's initial 355configuration prior to requesting an address, to test the address once it 356has been offered, and to set the interface's final configuration once a 357lease has been acquired. 358If no lease is acquired, the script is used to test predefined leases, if 359any, and also called once if no valid lease can be identified. 360For more information, see 361.Xr dhclient.leases 5 . 362.It Ic medium Qq Ar "media setup" ; 363The 364.Ic medium 365statement can be used on systems where network interfaces cannot 366automatically determine the type of network to which they are connected. 367The 368.Ar "media setup" 369string is a system-dependent parameter which is passed 370to the DHCP client configuration script when initializing the interface. 371On 372.Ux 373and 374.Ux Ns -like 375systems, the argument is passed on the 376.Xr ifconfig 8 377command line 378when configuring the interface. 379.Pp 380The DHCP client automatically declares this parameter if it used a 381media type (see the 382.Ic media 383statement) when configuring the interface in order to obtain a lease. 384This statement should be used in predefined leases only if the network 385interface requires media type configuration. 386.It Ic renew Ar date ; 387.It Ic rebind Ar date ; 388.It Ic expire Ar date ; 389The 390.Ic renew 391statement defines the time at which the DHCP client should begin trying to 392contact its server to renew a lease that it is using. 393The 394.Ic rebind 395statement defines the time at which the DHCP client should begin to try to 396contact 397.Em any 398DHCP server in order to renew its lease. 399The 400.Ic expire 401statement defines the time at which the DHCP client must stop using a lease 402if it has not been able to contact a server in order to renew it. 403.El 404.Pp 405These declarations are automatically set in leases acquired by the 406DHCP client, but must also be configured in predefined leases - a 407predefined lease whose expiry time has passed will not be used by the 408DHCP client. 409.Pp 410Dates are specified as follows: 411.Bd -ragged -offset indent 412.Ar <weekday> 413.Sm off 414.Ar <year> No / Ar <month> No / Ar <day> 415.Ar <hour> : <minute> : <second> 416.Sm on 417.Ed 418.Pp 419The weekday is present to make it easy for a human to tell when a 420lease expires - it is specified as a number from zero to six, with zero 421being Sunday. 422When declaring a predefined lease, it can always be specified as zero. 423The year is specified with the century, so it should generally be four 424digits except for really long leases. 425The month is specified as a number starting with 1 for January. 426The day of the month is likewise specified starting with 1. 427The hour is a number between 0 and 23, 428the minute a number between 0 and 59, 429and the second also a number between 0 and 59. 430.Sh ALIAS DECLARATIONS 431.Ic alias No { Ar declarations ... No } 432.Pp 433Some DHCP clients running TCP/IP roaming protocols may require that in 434addition to the lease they may acquire via DHCP, their interface also 435be configured with a predefined IP alias so that they can have a 436permanent IP address even while roaming. 437The Internet Software Consortium DHCP client does not support roaming with 438fixed addresses directly, but in order to facilitate such experimentation, 439the DHCP client can be set up to configure an IP alias using the 440.Ic alias 441declaration. 442.Pp 443The 444.Ic alias 445declaration resembles a lease declaration, except that options other than 446the subnet-mask option are ignored by the standard client configuration 447script, and expiry times are ignored. 448A typical alias declaration includes an interface declaration, a fixed-address 449declaration for the IP alias address, and a subnet-mask option declaration. 450A medium statement should never be included in an alias declaration. 451.Sh OTHER DECLARATIONS 452.Bl -tag -width indent 453.It Ic reject Ar ip-address ; 454The 455.Ic reject 456statement causes the DHCP client to reject offers from servers who use 457the specified address as a server identifier. 458This can be used to avoid being configured by rogue or misconfigured DHCP 459servers, although it should be a last resort - better to track down 460the bad DHCP server and fix it. 461.It Ic interface Qo Ar name Qc { Ar declarations ... No } 462A client with more than one network interface may require different 463behaviour depending on which interface is being configured. 464All timing parameters and declarations other than lease and alias 465declarations can be enclosed in an interface declaration, and those 466parameters will then be used only for the interface that matches the 467specified name. 468Interfaces for which there is no interface declaration will use the 469parameters declared outside of any interface declaration, 470or the default settings. 471.It Ic media Qo Ar "media setup" Qc Oo , Qo Ar "media setup" Qc , Ar ... Oc ; 472The 473.Ic media 474statement defines one or more media configuration parameters which may 475be tried while attempting to acquire an IP address. 476The DHCP client will cycle through each media setup string on the list, 477configuring the interface using that setup and attempting to boot, 478and then trying the next one. 479This can be used for network interfaces which are not capable of sensing 480the media type unaided - whichever media type succeeds in getting a request 481to the server and hearing the reply is probably right (no guarantees). 482.Pp 483The media setup is only used for the initial phase of address 484acquisition (the DHCPDISCOVER and DHCPOFFER packets). 485Once an address has been acquired, the DHCP client will record it in its 486lease database and will record the media type used to acquire the address. 487Whenever the client tries to renew the lease, it will use that same media type. 488The lease must expire before the client will go back to cycling through media 489types. 490.It Ic vlan-pcp Ar code ; 491The 492.Ic vlan-pcp 493statement sets the PCP (Priority Code Point) value for the VLAN header. 494This requires the 495.Va net.link.vlan.mtag_pcp 496sysctl to be set to 1. 497.El 498.Sh EXAMPLES 499The following configuration file is used on a laptop 500which has an IP alias of 501.Li 192.5.5.213 , 502and has one interface, 503.Li ep0 504(a 3Com 3C589C). 505Booting intervals have been shortened somewhat from the default, because 506the client is known to spend most of its time on networks with little DHCP 507activity. 508The laptop does roam to multiple networks. 509.Bd -literal -offset indent 510timeout 60; 511retry 60; 512reboot 10; 513select-timeout 5; 514initial-interval 2; 515reject 192.33.137.209; 516 517interface "ep0" { 518 send host-name "andare.fugue.com"; 519 send dhcp-client-identifier 1:0:a0:24:ab:fb:9c; 520 send dhcp-lease-time 3600; 521 supersede domain-name "fugue.com rc.vix.com home.vix.com"; 522 prepend domain-name-servers 127.0.0.1; 523 request subnet-mask, broadcast-address, time-offset, routers, 524 domain-name, domain-name-servers, host-name; 525 require subnet-mask, domain-name-servers; 526 script "/etc/dhclient-script"; 527 media "media 10baseT/UTP", "media 10base2/BNC"; 528} 529 530alias { 531 interface "ep0"; 532 fixed-address 192.5.5.213; 533 option subnet-mask 255.255.255.255; 534} 535.Ed 536.Pp 537This is a very complicated 538.Nm 539file - in general, yours should be much simpler. 540In many cases, it is sufficient to just create an empty 541.Nm 542file - the defaults are usually fine. 543.Sh SEE ALSO 544.Xr dhclient.leases 5 , 545.Xr dhcp-options 5 , 546.Xr dhcpd.conf 5 , 547.Xr dhclient 8 , 548.Xr dhcpd 8 549.Rs 550.%R "RFC 2132, RFC 2131" 551.Re 552.Sh AUTHORS 553.An -nosplit 554The 555.Xr dhclient 8 556utility 557was written by 558.An Ted Lemon Aq Mt mellon@vix.com 559under a contract with Vixie Labs. 560.Pp 561The current implementation was reworked by 562.An Henning Brauer Aq Mt henning@openbsd.org . 563