xref: /freebsd/sbin/dhclient/dhcp-options.5 (revision 2e3507c25e42292b45a5482e116d278f5515d04d)
1.\"	$OpenBSD: dhcp-options.5,v 1.5 2005/03/02 15:30:42 jmc Exp $
2.\"
3.\" Copyright (c) 1995, 1996, 1997, 1998 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 January 1, 1995
40.Dt DHCP-OPTIONS 5
41.Os
42.Sh NAME
43.Nm dhcp-options
44.Nd Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol options
45.Sh DESCRIPTION
46The Dynamic Host Configuration protocol allows the client to receive
47.Ic options
48from the DHCP server describing the network configuration and various
49services that are available on the network.
50When configuring
51.Xr dhcpd 8
52or
53.Xr dhclient 8 ,
54options must often be declared.
55The syntax for declaring options, and the names and formats of the options
56that can be declared, are documented here.
57.Sh REFERENCE: OPTION STATEMENTS
58DHCP
59.Ic option
60statements always start with the
61.Ic option
62keyword, followed by an option name, followed by option data.
63The option names and data formats are described below.
64It is not necessary to exhaustively specify all DHCP options -
65only those options which are needed by clients must be specified.
66.Pp
67Option data comes in a variety of formats, as defined below:
68.Pp
69The
70.Ar ip-address
71data type can be entered either as an explicit IP address
72(e.g.,
73.Li 239.254.197.10 )
74or as a domain name (e.g.,
75.Li haagen.isc.org ) .
76A domain name must resolve to a single IP address.
77.Pp
78The
79.Ar int32
80data type specifies a signed 32-bit integer.
81The
82.Ar uint32
83data type specifies an unsigned 32-bit integer.
84The
85.Ar int16
86and
87.Ar uint16
88data types specify signed and unsigned 16-bit integers.
89The
90.Ar int8
91and
92.Ar uint8
93data types specify signed and unsigned 8-bit integers.
94Unsigned 8-bit integers are also sometimes referred to as octets.
95.Pp
96The
97.Ar string
98data type specifies an
99.Tn NVT
100.Pq Network Virtual Terminal
101.Tn ASCII
102string, which must be enclosed in double quotes - for example,
103to specify a domain-name option, the syntax would be
104.Pp
105.Dl option domain-name \&"isc.org";
106.Pp
107The
108.Ar flag
109data type specifies a boolean value.
110Booleans can be either
111.Li true
112or
113.Li false
114(or
115.Li on
116or
117.Li off ,
118if that makes more sense to you).
119.Pp
120The
121.Ar data-string
122data type specifies either an
123.Tn NVT ASCII
124string enclosed in double quotes, or a series of octets specified in
125hexadecimal, separated by colons.
126For example:
127.Pp
128.Dl option dhcp-client-identifier \&"CLIENT-FOO";
129or
130.Dl option dhcp-client-identifier 43:4c:49:45:54:2d:46:4f:4f;
131.Pp
132The documentation for the various options mentioned below is taken
133from the IETF draft document on DHCP options, RFC 2132.
134Options which are not listed by name may be defined by the name
135.Li option- Ns Ar nnn ,
136where
137.Ar nnn
138is the decimal number of the option code.
139These options may be followed either by a string, enclosed in quotes, or by
140a series of octets, expressed as two-digit hexadecimal numbers separated
141by colons.
142For example:
143.Bd -literal -offset indent
144option option-133 "my-option-133-text";
145option option-129 1:54:c9:2b:47;
146.Ed
147.Pp
148Because
149.Xr dhcpd 8
150does not know the format of these undefined option codes,
151no checking is done to ensure the correctness of the entered data.
152.Pp
153The standard options are:
154.Ss RFC 1497 Vendor Extensions
155.Bl -tag -width indent
156.It Ic option subnet-mask Ar ip-address ;
157The
158.Ic subnet-mask
159option specifies the client's subnet mask as per RFC 950.
160If no subnet-mask option is provided anywhere in scope, as a last resort
161.Xr dhcpd 8
162will use the subnet mask from the subnet declaration for the network on
163which an address is being assigned.
164However,
165.Em any
166subnet-mask option declaration that is in scope for the address being
167assigned will override the subnet mask specified in the subnet declaration.
168.It Ic option time-offset Ar int32 ;
169The
170.Ic time-offset
171option specifies the offset of the client's subnet in seconds from
172Coordinated Universal Time (UTC).
173.It Xo
174.Ic option routers Ar ip-address
175.Oo , Ar ip-address ... Oc ;
176.Xc
177The
178.Ic routers
179option specifies a list of IP addresses for routers on the client's subnet.
180Routers should be listed in order of preference.
181.It Xo
182.Ic option time-servers Ar ip-address
183.Oo , Ar ip-address ... Oc ;
184.Xc
185The
186.Ic time-server
187option specifies a list of RFC 868 time servers available to the client.
188Servers should be listed in order of preference.
189.It Xo
190.Ic option ien116-name-servers Ar ip-address
191.Oo , Ar ip-address ... Oc ;
192.Xc
193The
194.Ic ien116-name-servers
195option specifies a list of IEN 116 name servers available to the client.
196Servers should be listed in order of preference.
197.It Xo
198.Ic option domain-name-servers Ar ip-address
199.Oo , Ar ip-address ... Oc ;
200.Xc
201The
202.Ic domain-name-servers
203option specifies a list of Domain Name System (STD 13, RFC 1035) name servers
204available to the client.
205Servers should be listed in order of preference.
206.It Xo
207.Ic option log-servers Ar ip-address
208.Oo , Ar ip-address ... Oc ;
209.Xc
210The
211.Ic log-servers
212option specifies a list of MIT-LCS UDP log servers available to the client.
213Servers should be listed in order of preference.
214.It Xo
215.Ic option cookie-servers Ar ip-address
216.Oo , Ar ip-address ... Oc ;
217.Xc
218The
219.Ic cookie-servers
220option specifies a list of RFC 865 cookie servers available to the client.
221Servers should be listed in order of preference.
222.It Xo
223.Ic option lpr-servers Ar ip-address
224.Oo , Ar ip-address ... Oc ;
225.Xc
226The
227.Ic lpr-servers
228option specifies a list of RFC 1179 line printer servers available to the
229client.
230Servers should be listed in order of preference.
231.It Xo
232.Ic option impress-servers Ar ip-address
233.Oo , Ar ip-address ... Oc ;
234.Xc
235The
236.Ic impress-servers
237option specifies a list of Imagen Impress servers available to the client.
238Servers should be listed in order of preference.
239.It Xo
240.Ic option resource-location-servers Ar ip-address
241.Oo , Ar ip-address ... Oc ;
242.Xc
243This option specifies a list of RFC 887 Resource Location servers available
244to the client.
245Servers should be listed in order of preference.
246.It Ic option host-name Ar string ;
247This option specifies the name of the client.
248The name may or may not be qualified with the local domain name
249(it is preferable to use the
250.Ic domain-name
251option to specify the domain name).
252See RFC 1035 for character set restrictions.
253.It Ic option boot-size Ar uint16 ;
254This option specifies the length in 512-octet blocks of the default
255boot image for the client.
256.It Ic option merit-dump Ar string ;
257This option specifies the pathname of a file to which the client's
258core image should be dumped in the event the client crashes.
259The path is formatted as a character string consisting of characters from
260the
261.Tn NVT ASCII
262character set.
263.It Ic option domain-name Ar string ;
264This option specifies the domain name that the client should use when
265resolving hostnames via the Domain Name System.
266.It Ic option domain-search Ar string ;
267This option specifies a list of domain names that the client should use
268when resolving hostnames via the Domain Name System.
269This option is defined in RFC 3397.
270.It Ic option swap-server Ar ip-address ;
271This specifies the IP address of the client's swap server.
272.It Ic option root-path Ar string ;
273This option specifies the pathname that contains the client's root disk.
274The path is formatted as a character string consisting of characters from
275the
276.Tn NVT ASCII
277character set.
278.El
279.Ss IP Layer Parameters per Host
280.Bl -tag -width indent
281.It Ic option ip-forwarding Ar flag ;
282This option specifies whether the client should configure its IP layer
283for packet forwarding.
284A value of 0 means disable IP forwarding, and a value of 1 means enable
285IP forwarding.
286.It Ic option non-local-source-routing Ar flag ;
287This option specifies whether the client should configure its IP
288layer to allow forwarding of datagrams with non-local source routes
289(see Section 3.3.5 of [4] for a discussion of this topic).
290A value of 0 means disallow forwarding of such datagrams, and a value of 1
291means allow forwarding.
292.It Xo
293.Ic option policy-filter Ar ip-address ip-address
294.Oo , Ar ip-address ip-address ... Oc ;
295.Xc
296This option specifies policy filters for non-local source routing.
297The filters consist of a list of IP addresses and masks which specify
298destination/mask pairs with which to filter incoming source routes.
299.Pp
300Any source-routed datagram whose next-hop address does not match one
301of the filters should be discarded by the client.
302.Pp
303See STD 3 (RFC 1122) for further information.
304.It Ic option max-dgram-reassembly Ar uint16 ;
305This option specifies the maximum size datagram that the client should be
306prepared to reassemble.
307The minimum legal value is 576.
308.It Ic option default-ip-ttl Ar uint8 ;
309This option specifies the default time-to-live that the client should
310use on outgoing datagrams.
311.It Ic option path-mtu-aging-timeout Ar uint32 ;
312This option specifies the timeout (in seconds) to use when aging Path
313MTU values discovered by the mechanism defined in RFC 1191.
314.It Xo
315.Ic option path-mtu-plateau-table Ar uint16
316.Oo , Ar uint16 ... Oc ;
317.Xc
318This option specifies a table of MTU sizes to use when performing
319Path MTU Discovery as defined in RFC 1191.
320The table is formatted as a list of 16-bit unsigned integers,
321ordered from smallest to largest.
322The minimum MTU value cannot be smaller than 68.
323.El
324.Ss IP Layer Parameters per Interface
325.Bl -tag -width indent
326.It Ic option interface-mtu Ar uint16 ;
327This option specifies the MTU to use on this interface.
328The minimum legal value for the MTU is 68.
329.It Ic option all-subnets-local Ar flag ;
330This option specifies whether or not the client may assume that all subnets
331of the IP network to which the client is connected use the same MTU as the
332subnet of that network to which the client is directly connected.
333A value of 1 indicates that all subnets share the same MTU.
334A value of 0 means that the client should assume that some subnets of the
335directly connected network may have smaller MTUs.
336.It Ic option broadcast-address Ar ip-address ;
337This option specifies the broadcast address in use on the client's subnet.
338Legal values for broadcast addresses are specified in section 3.2.1.3 of
339STD 3 (RFC 1122).
340.It Ic option perform-mask-discovery Ar flag ;
341This option specifies whether or not the client should perform subnet mask
342discovery using ICMP.
343A value of 0 indicates that the client should not perform mask discovery.
344A value of 1 means that the client should perform mask discovery.
345.It Ic option mask-supplier Ar flag ;
346This option specifies whether or not the client should respond to subnet mask
347requests using ICMP.
348A value of 0 indicates that the client should not respond.
349A value of 1 means that the client should respond.
350.It Ic option router-discovery Ar flag ;
351This option specifies whether or not the client should solicit routers using
352the Router Discovery mechanism defined in RFC 1256.
353A value of 0 indicates that the client should not perform router discovery.
354A value of 1 means that the client should perform router discovery.
355.It Ic option router-solicitation-address Ar ip-address ;
356This option specifies the address to which the client should transmit
357router solicitation requests.
358.It Xo
359.Ic option static-routes Ar ip-address ip-address
360.Oo , Ar ip-address ip-address ... Oc ;
361.Xc
362This option specifies a list of static routes that the client should
363install in its routing cache.
364If multiple routes to the same destination are specified, they are listed
365in descending order of priority.
366.Pp
367The routes consist of a list of IP address pairs.
368The first address is the destination address,
369and the second address is the router for the destination.
370.Pp
371The default route (0.0.0.0) is an illegal destination for a static route.
372To specify the default route, use the
373.Ic routers
374option.
375.El
376.Ss Link Layer Parameters per Interface
377.Bl -tag -width indent
378.It Ic option trailer-encapsulation Ar flag ;
379This option specifies whether or not the client should negotiate the
380use of trailers (RFC 893 [14]) when using the ARP protocol.
381A value of 0 indicates that the client should not attempt to use trailers.
382A value of 1 means that the client should attempt to use trailers.
383.It Ic option arp-cache-timeout Ar uint32 ;
384This option specifies the timeout in seconds for ARP cache entries.
385.It Ic option ieee802-3-encapsulation Ar flag ;
386This option specifies whether or not the client should use Ethernet
387Version 2 (RFC 894) or IEEE 802.3 (RFC 1042) encapsulation if the
388interface is an Ethernet.
389A value of 0 indicates that the client should use RFC 894 encapsulation.
390A value of 1 means that the client should use RFC 1042 encapsulation.
391.El
392.Ss TCP Parameters
393.Bl -tag -width indent
394.It Ic option default-tcp-ttl Ar uint8 ;
395This option specifies the default TTL that the client should use when
396sending TCP segments.
397The minimum value is 1.
398.It Ic option tcp-keepalive-interval Ar uint32 ;
399This option specifies the interval (in seconds) that the client TCP
400should wait before sending a keepalive message on a TCP connection.
401The time is specified as a 32-bit unsigned integer.
402A value of zero indicates that the client should not generate keepalive
403messages on connections unless specifically requested by an application.
404.It Ic option tcp-keepalive-garbage Ar flag ;
405This option specifies whether or not the client should send TCP keepalive
406messages with an octet of garbage for compatibility with older implementations.
407A value of 0 indicates that a garbage octet should not be sent.
408A value of 1 indicates that a garbage octet should be sent.
409.El
410.Ss Application and Service Parameters
411.Bl -tag -width indent
412.It Ic option nis-domain Ar string ;
413This option specifies the name of the client's NIS (Sun Network Information
414Services) domain.
415The domain is formatted as a character string consisting of characters
416from the
417.Tn NVT ASCII
418character set.
419.It Xo
420.Ic option nis-servers Ar ip-address
421.Oo , Ar ip-address ... Oc ;
422.Xc
423This option specifies a list of IP addresses indicating NIS servers
424available to the client.
425Servers should be listed in order of preference.
426.It Xo
427.Ic option ntp-servers Ar ip-address
428.Oo , Ar ip-address ... Oc ;
429.Xc
430This option specifies a list of IP addresses indicating NTP (RFC 1305)
431servers available to the client.
432Servers should be listed in order of preference.
433.It Xo
434.Ic option netbios-name-servers Ar ip-address
435.Oo , Ar ip-address ... Oc ;
436.Xc
437The NetBIOS name server (NBNS) option specifies a list of RFC 1001/1002
438NBNS name servers listed in order of preference.
439NetBIOS Name Service is currently more commonly referred to as WINS.
440WINS servers can be specified using the
441.Ic netbios-name-servers
442option.
443.It Xo
444.Ic option netbios-dd-server Ar ip-address
445.Oo , Ar ip-address ... Oc ;
446.Xc
447The NetBIOS datagram distribution server (NBDD) option specifies a
448list of RFC 1001/1002 NBDD servers listed in order of preference.
449.It Ic option netbios-node-type Ar uint8 ;
450The NetBIOS node type option allows NetBIOS over TCP/IP clients which
451are configurable to be configured as described in RFC 1001/1002.
452The value is specified as a single octet which identifies the client type.
453.Pp
454Possible node types are:
455.Bl -tag -width indent
456.It 1
457B-node: Broadcast - no WINS
458.It 2
459P-node: Peer - WINS only
460.It 4
461M-node: Mixed - broadcast, then WINS
462.It 8
463H-node: Hybrid - WINS, then broadcast
464.El
465.It Ic option netbios-scope Ar string ;
466The NetBIOS scope option specifies the NetBIOS over TCP/IP scope
467parameter for the client as specified in RFC 1001/1002.
468See RFC 1001, RFC 1002, and RFC 1035 for character-set restrictions.
469.It Xo
470.Ic option font-servers Ar ip-address
471.Oo , Ar ip-address ... Oc ;
472.Xc
473This option specifies a list of X Window System Font servers available
474to the client.
475Servers should be listed in order of preference.
476.It Xo
477.Ic option x-display-manager Ar ip-address
478.Oo , Ar ip-address ... Oc ;
479.Xc
480This option specifies a list of systems that are running the X Window
481System Display Manager and are available to the client.
482Addresses should be listed in order of preference.
483.It Ic option dhcp-client-identifier Ar data-string ;
484This option can be used to specify a DHCP client identifier in a
485host declaration, so that
486.Xr dhcpd 8
487can find the host record by matching against the client identifier.
488.It Ic option nisplus-domain Ar string ;
489This option specifies the name of the client's NIS+ domain.
490The domain is formatted as a character string consisting of characters
491from the
492.Tn NVT ASCII
493character set.
494.It Xo
495.Ic option nisplus-servers Ar ip-address
496.Oo , Ar ip-address ... Oc ;
497.Xc
498This option specifies a list of IP addresses indicating NIS+ servers
499available to the client.
500Servers should be listed in order of preference.
501.It Ic option tftp-server-name Ar string ;
502This option is used to identify a TFTP server and, if supported by the
503client, should have the same effect as the
504.Ic server-name
505declaration.
506BOOTP clients are unlikely to support this option.
507Some DHCP clients will support it, and others actually require it.
508.It Ic option bootfile-name Ar string ;
509This option is used to identify a bootstrap file.
510If supported by the client, it should have the same effect as the
511.Ic filename
512declaration.
513BOOTP clients are unlikely to support this option.
514Some DHCP clients will support it, and others actually require it.
515.It Xo
516.Ic option mobile-ip-home-agent Ar ip-address
517.Oo , Ar ip-address ... Oc ;
518.Xc
519This option specifies a list of IP addresses indicating mobile IP
520home agents available to the client.
521Agents should be listed in order of preference, although normally there
522will be only one such agent.
523.It Xo
524.Ic option smtp-server Ar ip-address
525.Oo , Ar ip-address ... Oc ;
526.Xc
527The
528.Ic smtp-server
529option specifies a list of SMTP servers available to the client.
530Servers should be listed in order of preference.
531.It Xo
532.Ic option pop-server Ar ip-address
533.Oo , Ar ip-address ... Oc ;
534.Xc
535The
536.Ic pop-server
537option specifies a list of POP3 servers available to the client.
538Servers should be listed in order of preference.
539.It Xo
540.Ic option nntp-server Ar ip-address
541.Oo , Ar ip-address ... Oc ;
542.Xc
543The
544.Ic nntp-server
545option specifies a list of NNTP servers available to the client.
546Servers should be listed in order of preference.
547.It Xo
548.Ic option www-server Ar ip-address
549.Oo , Ar ip-address ... Oc ;
550.Xc
551The
552.Ic www-server
553option specifies a list of WWW servers available to the client.
554Servers should be listed in order of preference.
555.It Xo
556.Ic option finger-server Ar ip-address
557.Oo , Ar ip-address ... Oc ;
558.Xc
559The
560.Ic finger-server
561option specifies a list of
562.Xr finger 1
563servers available to the client.
564Servers should be listed in order of preference.
565.It Xo
566.Ic option irc-server Ar ip-address
567.Oo , Ar ip-address ... Oc ;
568.Xc
569The
570.Ic irc-server
571option specifies a list of IRC servers available to the client.
572Servers should be listed in order of preference.
573.It Xo
574.Ic option streettalk-server Ar ip-address
575.Oo , Ar ip-address ... Oc ;
576.Xc
577The
578.Ic streettalk-server
579option specifies a list of StreetTalk servers available to the client.
580Servers should be listed in order of preference.
581.It Xo
582.Ic option streettalk-directory-assistance-server Ar ip-address
583.Oo , Ar ip-address ... Oc ;
584.Xc
585The StreetTalk Directory Assistance (STDA) server option specifies a
586list of STDA servers available to the client.
587Servers should be listed in order of preference.
588.It Ic option url Ar string ;
589This option specifies the URL that the client may use when using UEFI
590boot from a HTTP server.
591.El
592.Sh SEE ALSO
593.Xr dhclient.conf 5 ,
594.Xr dhcpd.conf 5 ,
595.Xr dhcpd.leases 5 ,
596.Xr dhclient 8 ,
597.Xr dhcpd 8
598.Rs
599.%R "RFC 2131, RFC 2132, RFC 3769"
600.Re
601.Sh AUTHORS
602.An -nosplit
603The
604.Xr dhcpd 8
605utility
606was written by
607.An Ted Lemon Aq Mt mellon@vix.com
608under a contract with Vixie Labs.
609.Pp
610The current implementation was reworked by
611.An Henning Brauer Aq Mt henning@openbsd.org .
612