And shorten leasetimes if they are long. Op 17 mrt. 2014 13:11 schreef "Ken Cornetet" <[email protected]> het volgende:
> You need to create a superscope. Without a superscope, DHCP won't assign > IP addresses outside what it thinks the subnet range is. > > > > *From:* [email protected] [mailto: > [email protected]] *On Behalf Of *Curt Finley > *Sent:* Friday, March 14, 2014 6:37 PM > *To:* [email protected] > *Subject:* [NTSysADM] DHCP question > > > > I have a Windows 2008 server running DHCP. I'll be kicking the remaining > XP systems off my network by the end of the month. I'm concerned that some > of them might wander back in and get reconnected. I'd like to set up DHCP > so it hands out bogus IP info to these systems making it impossible for > them to communicate on the network. I set up a scope on my DHCP server for > a bogus IP range. I then put in a reservation for a MAC address in that > scope and activate the scope. I go to the machine with that MAC address > and release the address, delete its lease from the server and renew its > lease. It comes back with a lease from the good IP range instead of the > bogus one. Is there something I can do to make this procedure work or am I > just out of luck? > > > > Thanks for your help. > > > > Curt >

