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[5381] Described how subnets/pools are used within shared networks.

Marcin Siodelski 7 years ago
parent
commit
f27fdc7c38
2 changed files with 52 additions and 0 deletions
  1. 26 0
      doc/guide/dhcp4-srv.xml
  2. 26 0
      doc/guide/dhcp6-srv.xml

+ 26 - 0
doc/guide/dhcp4-srv.xml

@@ -3505,6 +3505,32 @@ src/lib/dhcpsrv/cfg_host_operations.cc -->
     distinction is based on the type of device, rather than address space
     exhaustion.</para>
 
+    <para>A client connected to a shared network may be assigned an address from
+    any of the address pools defined within the subnets belonging to the shared
+    network. Internally, the server selects one of the subnets belonging to a
+    shared network and tries to allocate an address from this subnet. If the
+    server is unable to allocate an address from the selected subnet (e.g. due
+    to address pools exhaustion) it will use another subnet from the same shared
+    network and try to allocate an address from this subnet etc. Therefore, in the
+    typical case, the server will allocate all addresses available for a given
+    subnet before it starts allocating addresses from other subnets belonging to
+    the same shared network. However, in certain situations the client can be
+    allocated an address from the other subnets before the address pools in the
+    first subnet get exhausted. That is, when the client provides a hint that
+    belongs to another subnet or the client has reservations in a different than
+    default subnet.
+    </para>
+
+    <note>
+    <para>It is strongly discouraged for the Kea deployments to assume that the
+      server doesn't allocate addresses from other subnets until it uses all
+      the addresses from the first subnet in the shared network. Apart from the
+      fact that hints, host reservations and client classification affect subnet
+      selection, it is also considered that we will enhance allocation strategies
+      within a shared network in the future versions of Kea, so as the selection
+      of subnets within a shared network is equally probable (unpredictable).</para>
+    </note>
+
     <para>In order to define a shared network an additional configuration scope
     is introduced:
 <screen>

+ 26 - 0
doc/guide/dhcp6-srv.xml

@@ -3063,6 +3063,32 @@ If not specified, the default value is:
     modems. In this case, the distinction is based on the type of device, rather
     than coming out of running out address space.</para>
 
+    <para>A client connected to a shared network may be assigned an address from
+    any of the address pools defined within the subnets belonging to the shared
+    network. Internally, the server selects one of the subnets belonging to a
+    shared network and tries to allocate an address from this subnet. If the
+    server is unable to allocate an address from the selected subnet (e.g. due
+    to address pools exhaustion) it will use another subnet from the same shared
+    network and try to allocate an address from this subnet etc. Therefore, in the
+    typical case, the server will allocate all addresses available for a given
+    subnet before it starts allocating addresses from other subnets belonging to
+    the same shared network. However, in certain situations the client can be
+    allocated an address from the other subnets before the address pools in the
+    first subnet get exhausted. That is, when the client provides a hint that
+    belongs to another subnet or the client has reservations in a different than
+    default subnet.
+    </para>
+
+    <note>
+    <para>It is strongly discouraged for the Kea deployments to assume that the
+      server doesn't allocate addresses from other subnets until it uses all
+      the addresses from the first subnet in the shared network. Apart from the
+      fact that hints, host reservations and client classification affect subnet
+      selection, it is also considered that we will enhance allocation strategies
+      within a shared network in the future versions of Kea, so as the selection
+      of subnets within a shared network is equally probable (unpredictable).</para>
+    </note>
+
     <para>In order to define a shared network an additional configuration scope
     is introduced:
 <screen>