1# 2# CDDL HEADER START 3# 4# The contents of this file are subject to the terms of the 5# Common Development and Distribution License (the "License"). 6# You may not use this file except in compliance with the License. 7# 8# You can obtain a copy of the license at usr/src/OPENSOLARIS.LICENSE 9# or http://www.opensolaris.org/os/licensing. 10# See the License for the specific language governing permissions 11# and limitations under the License. 12# 13# When distributing Covered Code, include this CDDL HEADER in each 14# file and include the License file at usr/src/OPENSOLARIS.LICENSE. 15# If applicable, add the following below this CDDL HEADER, with the 16# fields enclosed by brackets "[]" replaced with your own identifying 17# information: Portions Copyright [yyyy] [name of copyright owner] 18# 19# CDDL HEADER END 20# 21 22# 23# Copyright 2006 Sun Microsystems, Inc. All rights reserved. 24# Use is subject to license terms. 25# 26#ident "%Z%%M% %I% %E% SMI" 27# 28 29# 30# This file contains tunable parameters for dhcpagent(1M). 31# 32 33# All parameters can be tuned for a specific interface by prepending 34# the interface name to the parameter name. For example, to make 35# RELEASE_ON_SIGTERM happen on all interfaces except hme0, specify: 36# 37# hme0.RELEASE_ON_SIGTERM=no 38# RELEASE_ON_SIGTERM=yes 39 40# By default, when the DHCP agent is sent a SIGTERM, all managed 41# interfaces are dropped. By uncommenting the following 42# parameter-value pair, all managed interfaces are released instead. 43# 44# RELEASE_ON_SIGTERM=yes 45 46# By default, the DHCP agent waits 3 seconds to collect OFFER 47# responses to a DISCOVER. If it receives no OFFERs in this time, it 48# then waits for another 3 seconds, and so forth. To change this 49# behavior, set and uncomment the following parameter-value pair. 50# Note: this does not control the retransmission strategy for 51# DISCOVERs, which is formally specified in RFC 2131. This parameter 52# is specified in seconds. 53# 54# OFFER_WAIT= 55 56# By default, the DHCP agent does not send out a client identifier 57# (and hence, the chaddr field is used by the DHCP server as the 58# client identifier.) To make the DHCP agent send a client 59# identifier, set and uncomment the following parameter-value pair. 60# Note that by default this is treated as an NVT ASCII string. To 61# specify a binary value, prepend "0x" to a sequence of hexadecimal 62# digits (for example, the value 0xAABBCC11 would set the client 63# identifier to the 4-byte binary sequence 0xAA 0xBB 0xCC 0x11). 64# 65# CLIENT_ID= 66 67# By default, the DHCP agent will try to request the hostname currently 68# associated with the interface performing DHCP. If this option is 69# enabled, the agent will attempt to find a host name in /etc/hostname.<if>, 70# which must contain a line of the form 71# 72# inet name 73# 74# where "name" is a single RFC 1101-compliant token. If found, the token 75# will be used to request that host name from the DHCP server. To prevent 76# this, uncomment the following line. 77# 78# REQUEST_HOSTNAME=no 79 80# By default, a parameter request list requesting a subnet mask (1), 81# router (3), DNS server (6), hostname (12), DNS domain (15), broadcast 82# address (28), and encapsulated vendor options (43), is sent to the DHCP 83# server when the DHCP agent sends requests. However, if desired, this 84# can be changed by altering the following parameter-value pair. The 85# numbers correspond to the values defined in RFC 2132. 86# 87PARAM_REQUEST_LIST=1,3,6,12,15,28,43 88