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At 09:46 24.03.99 -0800, John Kemp wrote:
>I was just curious why I see a bunch of 2-minute length
>leases in ISC /etc/dhcpd.leases file.
>
>It seems that when you get a release, like this:
>
>Mar 24 09:44:46 phloem dhcpd: DHCPRELEASE of 128.223.107.32 from
00:00:c5:50:c4:6c via hme0 (found)
>
>You get a lease entry like this:
>
>lease 128.223.107.32 {
> starts 3 1999/03/24 17:42:46;
> ends 3 1999/03/24 17:44:46;
> hardware ethernet 00:00:c5:50:c4:6c;
> uid 01:00:00:c5:50:c4:6c;
>}
>
>Anyone understand the concept here?
Dhcpd records the lease as having ended at the time it received the
release. Seems quite logical to me. The question is rather, why would
a bunch of clients request leases and release them two minutes after
they'd got them?
--
Tilman Schmidt E-Mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] (office)
Sema Group Koeln, Germany [EMAIL PROTECTED] (private)
"newfs leaves the filesystem in a well known state (empty)."
- Henrik Nordstrom
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