On Tue, 27 Mar 2007, Bob Doolittle wrote:

> If you have a separate DHCP server for laptops, etc,
> the simplest thing to do is to allow *that* server to
> serve addresses to Sun Rays also.

I'll use this.

> This is why when you run 'utadm -A <subnet>' the default is
> to *not* allocate addresses.  We recommend that you take that
> option.

Ok i now understand!

  The Sun Ray server will continue to offer Sun Ray
> vendor-specific boot parameters *only*, and only to Sun Rays.
>
> You can also investigate the DNS boot configuration options,
> and offer DHCP option 66.  See section 7 of the Administration
> Guide or read Thin Guy's blog for more details.
>
> Does that help?

yep.

Thanks,

THierry.

> -Bob
>
> Thierry Delaitre wrote:
> > Hi,
> >
> > I have configured some sunrays in kiosk mode which connects to a group of
> > sunray servers using the public University network. Each sunray server is
> > offering a pool of few IP addresses. The problem is the sunray servers
> > seem to offer DHCP addresses to laptops or PCs which are set of get IP
> > addresses using DHCP. As a result, this create a denial of service for the
> > sunray which gives up connecting to the sunray servers due to lack of
> > spare IP addresses :-(
> >
> > I've configured the sunray dhcp servers via the native sunray utilities. I
> > would expect the Solaris dhcp servers with the sunray software to only
> > grant IP addresses to sunray appliances. Should not it be possible to
> > configure this by filtering the specific sunray dhcp extension? Is this
> > feasible and what is the command to use ?
> >
> > Thanks,
> >
> > Thierry.
> > _______________________________________________
> > SunRay-Users mailing list
> > [email protected]
> > http://node1.filibeto.org/mailman/listinfo/sunray-users
> >
>
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