Windows 2003 dhcp vlan


















I'll set up a scope in DHCP Is there typically more involved than that or is it pretty simple? At a very simple level: Your router will need an interface attached to that subnet VLAN subnet with an ip address valid for that subnet.

You'll then enable the DHCP relay function on the router and that should do it. Ok I set up the scope on my DHCP server, but I am having trouble getting the router to pull addresses from that scope. It either pulls from my current scope I'm not understanding you. Do you mean that clients behind that router are not getting DHCP assigned ip addresses? The router s also need to be able to forward the DHCP broadcasts between subnets.

They are getting DHCP assigned ip address, but they are from the wrong scope. I apologize if I'm not being very clear I have not dealt with this very much in the past. Thanks for your assistance.

Show 2 more comments. Sign up or log in Sign up using Google. Sign up using Facebook. First Solution: The culprit was that there was a monitor port setup on the HP Procurve switch that was monitoring all the traffic on the port that the router was plugged into and replicating it to the port the DHCP server was plugged into.

That's why I was seeing both packets in the capture. As soon as I turned this off, I didn't get the wrong IP on the guest network Posted by Craig at PM. On the switch, the ports that connect to hosts computers, servers must be set as access for the desired VLAN. Sign up to join this community.

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