NAME
dhcpd.leases
—
DHCP server lease database
DESCRIPTION
The Internet Software Consortium DHCP Server keeps a persistent database of leases that it has assigned. This database is a free-form ASCII file containing a series of lease declarations. Every time a lease is acquired, renewed or released, its new value is recorded at the end of the lease file. So if more than one declaration appears for a given lease, the last one in the file is the current one.
FORMAT
Lease descriptions are stored in a format that is parsed by the
same recursive descent parser used to read the
dhcpd.conf(5) and
dhclient.conf(5) files. Currently, the only declaration that
is used in the dhcpd.leases
file is the
lease
declaration.
lease
ip-address {
statements... }Each lease declaration includes the single IP address that has been leased to the client. The statements within the braces define the duration of the lease and to whom it is assigned.
The start and end time of a lease are recorded using the
starts
and ends
statements:
starts
dateends
dateDates are specified as follows:
The weekday is present to make it easy for a human to tell when a lease expires - it's specified as a number from zero to six, with zero being Sunday. The day of week is ignored on input. The year is specified with the century, so it should generally be four digits except for really long leases. The month is specified as a number starting with 1 for January. The day of the month is likewise specified starting with 1. The hour is a number from 0 to 23, the minute a number from 0 to 59, and the second also a number from 0 to 59.
Lease times are specified in Coordinated Universal Time (UTC), not in the local time zone.
The MAC address of the network interface that was used to acquire
the lease is recorded with the hardware
statement:
hardware
hardware-type mac-addressThe MAC address is specified as a series of hexadecimal octets, separated by colons.
If the client uses a client identifier to acquire its address, the
client identifier is recorded using the uid
statement:
uid
client-identifierThe client identifier is recorded as a series of hexadecimal octets, regardless of whether the client specifies an ASCII string or uses the newer hardware type/MAC address format.
If the client sends a hostname using the Client
Hostname
option, as specified in some versions of the DHCP-DNS
Interaction draft, that hostname is recorded using the
client-hostname
statement.
client-hostname
"hostname"If the client sends its hostname using the
Hostname
option, it is recorded using the
hostname
statement.
hostname
"hostname"The DHCP server may determine that a lease has been misused in
some way, either because a client that has been assigned a lease NAKs it, or
because the server's own attempt to see if an address is in use prior to
reusing it reveals that the address is in fact already in use. In that case,
the abandoned
statement will be used to indicate
that the lease should not be reassigned.
abandoned
Abandoned leases are reclaimed automatically. When a client asks for a new address, and the server finds that there are no new addresses, it checks to see if there are any abandoned leases, and allocates the least recently abandoned lease. The standard mechanisms for checking for lease address conflicts are still followed, so if the abandoned lease's IP address is still in use, it will be reabandoned.
If a client requests an abandoned address, the server assumes that the reason the address was abandoned was that the lease file was corrupted, and that the client is the machine that responded when the lease was probed, causing it to be abandoned. In that case, the address is immediately assigned to the client.
FILES
- /var/db/dhcpd.leases
SEE ALSO
STANDARDS
R. Droms, Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol, RFC 2131, March 1997.
S. Alexander and R. Droms, DHCP Options and BOOTP Vendor Extensions, RFC 2132, March 1997.
AUTHORS
dhcpd(8) was written by Ted Lemon <mellon@vix.com> under a contract with Vixie Labs.
The current implementation was reworked by Henning Brauer <henning@openbsd.org>.