advanced.json 5.2 KB

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  1. // This is an example configuration file for DHCPv4 server in Kea.
  2. // It covers some of the more advanced features. This file may not be coherent
  3. // as its main purpose is to demonstrate the features. They don't necessarily
  4. // have to make sense used together.
  5. // The new parser supports 3 comment styles:
  6. // This is C++ style.
  7. # This is a bash style.
  8. /* This is a C style comment. */
  9. /* C style comment
  10. can span
  11. multiple lines */
  12. { "Dhcp4":
  13. {
  14. // Kea is told to listen on ethX interface only.
  15. "interfaces-config": {
  16. "interfaces": [ "ethX" ],
  17. // This specifies what type of socket Kea uses. Currently supported
  18. // are 'raw' (which is the default) and 'udp'. Raw has the benefit
  19. // of receiving all traffic every time and a downside of bypassing
  20. // all firewall rules and having marginally bigger performance impact.
  21. // 'udp' is generally better if you have only relayed traffic. Kea
  22. // than opens up normal UDP socket and the kernel does all the
  23. // Ethernet/IP stack processing.
  24. "dhcp-socket-type": "udp",
  25. // This makes interfaces to be re-detected at each (re-)configuration.
  26. // By default it is true.
  27. "re-detect": true
  28. },
  29. // We need to specify the the database used to store leases. As of
  30. // September 2016, four database backends are supported: MySQL,
  31. // PostgreSQL, Cassandra, and the in-memory database, Memfile.
  32. // We'll use memfile because it doesn't require any prior set up.
  33. // For memfile, it's important to always specify lfc-interval, so
  34. // the lease file would not grow without bounds and be sanitized
  35. // once per hour.
  36. "lease-database": {
  37. "type": "memfile",
  38. "lfc-interval": 3600
  39. },
  40. // This defines a control socket. If defined, Kea will open a UNIX socket
  41. // and will listen for incoming commands. See section 15 of the Kea User's
  42. // Guide for list of supported commands.
  43. "control-socket": {
  44. "socket-type": "unix",
  45. "socket-name": "/tmp/kea4-ctrl-socket"
  46. },
  47. // Addresses will be assigned with a lifetime of 4000 seconds.
  48. // The client is told to start renewing after 1000 seconds. If the server
  49. // does not respond within 2000 seconds of the lease being granted, client
  50. // is supposed to start REBIND procedure (emergency renewal that allows
  51. // switching to a different server).
  52. "valid-lifetime": 4000,
  53. "renew-timer": 1000,
  54. "rebind-timer": 2000,
  55. // RFC6842 says that the server is supposed to echo back client-id option.
  56. // However, some older clients do not support this and are getting confused
  57. // when they get their own client-id. Kea can disable RFC6842 support.
  58. "echo-client-id": false,
  59. // Some clients don't use stable client identifier, but rather
  60. // generate them during each boot. This may cause a client that
  61. // reboots frequently to get multiple leases, which may not be
  62. // desirable. As such, sometimes admins prefer to tell their DHCPv4
  63. // server to ignore client-id value altogether and rely exclusively
  64. // on MAC address. This is a parameter that is defined globally, but
  65. // can be overridden on a subnet level.
  66. "match-client-id": true,
  67. // The following list defines subnets. Each subnet consists of at
  68. // least subnet and pool entries.
  69. "subnet4": [
  70. {
  71. "pools": [ { "pool": "192.0.2.1 - 192.0.2.200" } ],
  72. "subnet": "192.0.2.0/24"
  73. },
  74. {
  75. // This particular subnet has match-client-id value changed.
  76. // This causes Kea to ignore client-id values in this subnet
  77. // and rely exclusively on MAC addresses.
  78. "pools": [ { "pool": "192.0.3.100 - 192.0.3.200" } ],
  79. "subnet": "192.0.3.0/24",
  80. "match-client-id": false
  81. },
  82. {
  83. "pools": [ { "pool": "192.0.4.1 - 192.0.4.254" } ],
  84. "subnet": "192.0.4.0/24",
  85. // Sometimes the relay may use an IPv4 address that does
  86. // not match the subnet. This is discouraged, but there are
  87. // valid cases when it makes sense. One case is when there
  88. // is a shared subnet.
  89. "relay": {
  90. "ip-address": "192.168.1.1"
  91. }
  92. }
  93. ]
  94. },
  95. // The following configures logging. It assumes that messages with
  96. // at least informational level (info, warn, error and fatal) should
  97. // be logged to stdout.
  98. "Logging": {
  99. "loggers": [
  100. {
  101. "name": "kea-dhcp4",
  102. "output_options": [
  103. {
  104. "output": "stdout",
  105. // Several additional parameters are possible in addition
  106. // to the typical output. Flush determines whether logger
  107. // flushes output to a file. Maxsize determines maximum
  108. // filesize before the file is being rotated. maxver
  109. // specifies the maximum number of rotated files being
  110. // kept.
  111. "flush": true,
  112. "maxsize": 204800,
  113. "maxver": 4
  114. }
  115. ],
  116. "severity": "INFO"
  117. }
  118. ]
  119. }
  120. }