DESCRIPTION
dhcpagent implements the client half of the Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol
(DHCP) for machines running illumos software.
The
dhcpagent daemon obtains configuration parameters for the client (local) machine's network interfaces from a
DHCP server. These parameters may include a lease on an
IP address, which gives the client machine use of the address for the period of the lease, which may be infinite. If the client wishes to use the
IP address for a period longer than the lease, it must negotiate an extension using
DHCP. For this reason,
dhcpagent must run as a daemon, terminating only when the client machine powers down.
For IPv4, the
dhcpagent daemon is controlled through
ipadm(1M),
nwamcfg(1M), or
ifconfig(1M) in much the same way that the
init(1M) daemon is controlled by
telinit(1M).
dhcpagent can be invoked as a user process, albeit one requiring root privileges, but this is not necessary, as
ipadm(1M),
nwamcfg(1M), or
ifconfig(1M) will start
dhcpagent automatically.
For IPv6, the
dhcpagent daemon is invoked automatically by
in.ndpd(1M). It can also be controlled through
ifconfig(1M), if necessary.
When invoked,
dhcpagent enters a passive state while it awaits instructions from
ipadm(1M),
nwamcfg(1M),
ifconfig(1M), or
in.ndpd(1M). When
dhcpagent receives a command to configure an interface,
dhcpagent brings up the interface (if necessary) and starts DHCP. Once DHCP is complete,
dhcpagent can be queried for the values of the various network parameters. In addition, if DHCP was used to obtain a lease on an address for an interface,
dhcpagent configures the address for use. When a lease is obtained, it is automatically renewed as necessary. If the lease cannot be renewed,
dhcpagent will unconfigure the address, but the interface will be left up, and
dhcpagent will attempt to acquire a new address lease.
dhcpagent monitors system suspend/resume events and will validate any non-permanent leases with the DHCP server upon resume. Similarly,
dhcpagent monitors link up/down events and will validate any non-permanent leases with the DHCP server when the downed link is brought back up. The lease validation mechanism will restart DHCP if the server indicates that the existing lease is no longer valid. If the server cannot be contacted, then the existing lease will continue. This behavior can be modified with the
VERIFIED_LEASE_ONLY parameter in the
/etc/default/dhcpagent file. See the description of this parameter below.
For IPv4, if the configured interface is found to be unplumbed, or to have a different IP address, subnet mask, or broadcast address from those obtained from DHCP, the interface is abandoned from DHCP control.
For IPv6,
dhcpagent automatically plumbs and unplumbs logical interfaces as necessary for the IPv6 addresses supplied by the server. The IPv6 prefix length (netmask) is not set by the DHCPv6 protocol, but is instead set by
in.ndpd(1M) using prefix information obtained by Router Advertisements. If any of the logical interfaces created by
dhcpagent is unplumbed, or configured with a different IP address, it will be abandoned from DHCP control. If the link-local interface is unplumbed, then all addresses configured by DHCP on that physical interface will be removed.
In addition to
DHCP,
dhcpagent also supports
BOOTP (IPv4 only). See
RFC 951, Bootstrap Protocol. Configuration parameters obtained from a
BOOTP server are treated identically to those received from a
DHCP server, except that the
IP address received from a
BOOTP server always has an infinite lease.
DHCP also acts as a mechanism to configure other information needed by the client, for example, the domain name and addresses of routers. Aside from the IP address, and for IPv4 alone, the netmask, broadcast address, and default router, the agent does not directly configure the workstation, but instead acts as a database which may be interrogated by other programs, and in particular by
dhcpinfo(1).
On clients with a single interface, this is quite straightforward. Clients with multiple interfaces may present difficulties, as it is possible that some information arriving on different interfaces may need to be merged, or may be inconsistent. Furthermore, the configuration of the interfaces is asynchronous, so requests may arrive while some or all of the interfaces are still unconfigured. To handle these cases, one interface may be designated as primary, which makes it the authoritative source for the values of
DHCP parameters in the case where no specific interface is requested. See
dhcpinfo(1) and
ifconfig(1M) for details.
For IPv4, the
dhcpagent daemon can be configured to request a particular Fully Qualified Domain Name (FQDN) or host name. See the
REQUEST_FQDN or
REQUEST_HOSTNAME description in the
FILES section. When first configuring a client to request an FQDN or host name, you must perform the following steps as root to ensure that the full DHCP negotiation takes place:
# pkill dhcpagent
# rm /etc/dhcp/
interface.dhc
# reboot
All DHCP packets sent by
dhcpagent include a vendor class identifier (RFC 2132, option code 60; RFC 3315, option code 16). This identifier is the same as the platform name returned by the
uname -i command, except:
-
o
-
Any commas in the platform name are changed to periods.
-
o
-
If the name does not start with a stock symbol and a comma, it is automatically prefixed with SUNW.
Messages
The
dhcpagent daemon writes information and error messages in five categories:
critical
Critical messages indicate severe conditions that prevent proper operation.
errors
Error messages are important, sometimes unrecoverable events due to resource exhaustion and other unexpected failure of system calls; ignoring errors may lead to degraded functionality.
warnings
Warnings indicate less severe problems, and in most cases, describe unusual or incorrect datagrams received from servers, or requests for service that cannot be provided.
informational
Informational messages provide key pieces of information that can be useful to debugging a DHCP configuration at a site. Informational messages are generally controlled by the -v option. However, certain critical pieces of information, such as the IP address obtained, are always provided.
debug
Debugging messages, which may be generated at two different levels of verbosity, are chiefly of benefit to persons having access to source code, but may be useful as well in debugging difficult DHCP configuration problems. Debugging messages are only generated when using the -d option.
When
dhcpagent is run without the
-f option, all messages are sent to the system logger
syslog(3C) at the appropriate matching priority and with a facility identifier
LOG_DAEMON. When
dhcpagent is run with the
-f option, all messages are directed to standard error.
DHCP Events and User-Defined Actions
If an executable (binary or script) is placed at
/etc/dhcp/eventhook, the
dhcpagent daemon will automatically run that program when any of the following events occur:
BOUND and
BOUND6
These events occur during interface configuration. The event program is invoked when dhcpagent receives the DHCPv4 ACK or DHCPv6 Reply message from the DHCP server for the lease request of an address, indicating successful initial configuration of the interface. (See also the INFORM and INFORM6 events, which occur when configuration parameters are obtained without address leases.)
EXTEND and
EXTEND6
These events occur during lease extension. The event program is invoked just after
dhcpagent receives the DHCPv4 ACK or DHCPv6 Reply from the DHCP server for the DHCPv4 REQUEST (renew) message or the DHCPv6 Renew or Rebind message.
Note that with DHCPv6, the server might choose to remove some addresses, add new address leases, and ignore (allow to expire) still other addresses in a given Reply message. The
EXTEND6 event occurs when a Reply is received that leaves one or more address leases still valid, even if the Reply message does not extend the lease for any address. The event program is invoked just before any addresses are removed, but just after any new addresses are added. Those to be removed will be marked with the
IFF_DEPRECATED flag.
EXPIRE and
EXPIRE6
These events occur during lease expiration. For DHCPv4, the event program is invoked just before the leased address is removed from an interface. For DHCPv6, the event program is invoked just before the last remaining leased addresses are removed from the interface.
DROP and
DROP6
These events occur during the period when an interface is dropped. The event program is invoked just before the interface is removed from DHCP control. If the interface has been abandoned due the user unplumbing the interface, then this event will occur after the user's action has taken place. The interface might not be present.
INFORM and
INFORM6
These events occur when an interface acquires new or updated configuration information from a DHCP server by means of the DHCPv4 INFORM or the DHCPv6 Information-Request message. These messages are sent using an ifconfig(1M) dhcp inform command or when the DHCPv6 Router Advertisement O (letter 0) bit is set and the M bit is not set. Thus, these events occur when the DHCP client does not obtain an IP address lease from the server, and instead obtains only configuration parameters.
LOSS6
This event occurs during lease expiration when one or more valid leases still remain. The event program is invoked just before expired addresses are removed. Those being removed will be marked with the
IFF_DEPRECATED flag.
Note that this event is not associated with the receipt of the Reply message, which occurs only when one or more valid leases remain, and occurs only with DHCPv6. If all leases have expired, then the EXPIRE6 event occurs instead.
RELEASE and
RELEASE6
This event occurs during the period when a leased address is released. The event program is invoked just before dhcpagent relinquishes the address on an interface and sends the DHCPv4 RELEASE or DHCPv6 Release packet to the DHCP server.
The system does not provide a default event program. The file
/etc/dhcp/eventhook is expected to be owned by root and have a mode of 755.
The event program will be passed two arguments, the interface name and the event name, respectively. For DHCPv6, the interface name is the name of the physical interface.
The event program can use the
dhcpinfo(1) utility to fetch additional information about the interface. While the event program is invoked on every event defined above, it can ignore those events in which it is not interested. The event program runs with the same privileges and environment as
dhcpagent itself, except that
stdin,
stdout, and
stderr are redirected to
/dev/null. Note that this means that the event program runs with root privileges.
If an invocation of the event program does not exit after 55 seconds, it is sent a
SIGTERM signal. If does not exit within the next three seconds, it is terminated by a
SIGKILL signal.
See EXAMPLES for an example event program.
NOTES
The
dhcpagent daemon can be used on IPv4 logical interfaces, just as with physical interfaces. When used on a logical interface, the daemon automatically constructs a Client ID value based on the DUID and IAID values, according to RFC 4361. The
/etc/default/dhcpagent CLIENT_ID value, if any, overrides this automatic identifier.
As with physical IPv4 interfaces, the
/etc/hostname.hme0:1 and
/etc/dhcp.hme0:1 files must also be created in order for
hme0:1 to be automatically plumbed and configured at boot. In addition, unlike physical IPv4 interfaces,
dhcpagent does not add or remove default routes associated with logical interfaces.
DHCP can be performed on IPMP IP interfaces to acquire and maintain IPMP data addresses. Because an IPMP IP interface has no hardware address, the daemon automatically constructs a Client ID using the same approach described above for IPv4 logical interfaces. In addition, the lack of a hardware address means the daemon must set the "broadcast" flag in all
DISCOVER and
REQUEST messages on IPMP IP interfaces. Some DHCP servers may refuse such requests.
DHCP can be performed on IP interfaces that are part of an IPMP group (to acquire and maintain test addresses). The daemon will automatically set the
NOFAILOVER and
DEPRECATED flags on each test address. Additionally, the daemon will not add or remove default routes in this case. Note that the actual DHCP packet exchange may be performed over any active IP interface in the IPMP group. It is strongly recommended that test addresses have infinite leases. Otherwise, an extended network outage detectable only by probes may cause test address leases to expire, causing
in.mpathd(1M) to revert to link-based failure detection and trigger an erroneous repair.
With DHCPv6, the link-local interface must be configured using
/etc/hostname6.hme0 in order for DHCPv6 to run on
hme0 at boot time. The logical interfaces for each address are plumbed by
dhcpagent automatically.