Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol (DHCP)/BootP (Bootstrap Protocol)
- Wednesday, November 12, 2008, 12:28
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Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol (DHCP)/BootP (Bootstrap Protocol)
Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol (DHCP) gives IP addresses to hosts. It allows easier administration and works well in small-to-even-very-large network environments. All types of hardware can be used as a DHCP server, including a Cisco router.
DHCP differs from BootP in that BootP gives an IP address to a host, but the host’s hardware address must be entered manually in a BootP table. You can think of DHCP as a dynamic BootP. But remember that BootP is also used to send an operating system that a host can boot from. DHCP can’t do that.
But there is a lot of information a DHCP server can provide to a host when the host is requesting an IP address from the DHCP server. Here’s a list of the information a DHCP server can provide:
• IP address
• Subnet mask
• Domain name
• Default gateway (routers)
• DNS
• WINS information
A DHCP server can give us even more information than this, but the items in that list are the most common.
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