*** From dhcp-server -- To unsubscribe, see the end of this message. ***
It seems that everytime I boot a computer or thin client I get a new lease and
the old lease is left in the dhcpd.leases file. Is this the way it is supposed
to work? Below is part of my dhcpd.leases file. As you can see one host has a
number of entries. Maby it works this way to support aliases?
lease 10.100.3.132 {
starts 2 1999/06/01 14:26:49;
ends 2 1999/06/01 14:29:49;
hardware ethernet 00:10:4b:32:ad:b1;
uid 01:00:10:4b:32:ad:b1;
client-hostname "maxfordpc";
}
lease 10.100.3.132 {
starts 2 1999/06/01 14:28:19;
ends 2 1999/06/01 14:31:19;
hardware ethernet 00:10:4b:32:ad:b1;
uid 01:00:10:4b:32:ad:b1;
client-hostname "maxfordpc";
}
lease 10.100.3.132 {
starts 2 1999/06/01 14:29:49;
ends 2 1999/06/01 14:32:49;
hardware ethernet 00:10:4b:32:ad:b1;
uid 01:00:10:4b:32:ad:b1;
client-hostname "maxfordpc";
}
lease 10.100.3.132 {
starts 2 1999/06/01 14:31:19;
ends 2 1999/06/01 14:34:19;
hardware ethernet 00:10:4b:32:ad:b1;
uid 01:00:10:4b:32:ad:b1;
client-hostname "maxfordpc";
}
---------------------------------
David Hamm
Systems Analyst
Imaging Technologies Services Inc.
email: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
voice: 404-870-6663
---------------------------------
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
To unsubscribe from this list, please visit:
http://www.isc.org/dhcp-lists.html
If you are without web access, or if you are having trouble with the web page,
please send mail to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with the subject line of
'unsubscribe'.
Archives for this mailing list are available at:
http://www.webnology.com/list-archives/dhcp/dhcp-server
------------------------------------------------------------------------------