reservations.json 6.0 KB

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  1. // This is an example configuration file for the DHCPv4 server in Kea.
  2. // It contains one subnet in which there are two static address reservations
  3. // for the clients identified by the MAC addresses.
  4. { "Dhcp4":
  5. {
  6. // Kea is told to listen on ethX interface only.
  7. "interfaces-config": {
  8. "interfaces": [ "ethX" ]
  9. },
  10. // We need to specify the the database used to store leases. As of
  11. // September 2016, four database backends are supported: MySQL,
  12. // PostgreSQL, Cassandra, and the in-memory database, Memfile.
  13. // We'll use memfile because it doesn't require any prior set up.
  14. "lease-database": {
  15. "type": "memfile",
  16. "lfc-interval": 3600
  17. },
  18. // Addresses will be assigned with a lifetime of 4000 seconds.
  19. "valid-lifetime": 4000,
  20. // Renew and rebind timers are commented out. This implies that options
  21. // 58 and 59 will not be sent to the client. In this case it is up to
  22. // the client to pick the timer values according to RFC2131. Uncomment the
  23. // timers to send these options to the client.
  24. // "renew-timer": 1000,
  25. // "rebind-timer": 2000,
  26. // Kea supports reservations by several different types of identifiers:
  27. // hw-address (hardware/MAC address of the client), duid (DUID inserted by the
  28. // client), client-id (client identifier inserted by the client) and circuit-id
  29. // (circuit identifier inserted by the relay agent). When told to do so, Kea can
  30. // check for all of those identifier types, but it takes a costly database lookup
  31. // to do so. It is therefore useful from a performance perspective to use only
  32. // the reservation types that are actually used in a given network.
  33. // The example below is not optimal from a performance perspective, but it
  34. // nicely showcases the host reservation capabilities. Please use the minimum
  35. // set of identifier types used in your network.
  36. "host-reservation-identifiers": [ "circuit-id", "hw-address", "duid", "client-id" ],
  37. // Define a subnet with four reservations. Some of the reservations belong
  38. // to the dynamic pool. Kea is able to handle this case, but it is not
  39. // recommended from a performance perspective, as Kea would not only need to
  40. // check if a given address is free, but also whether it is reserved.
  41. // To avoid this check, one can change reservation-mode to out-of-pool, rather
  42. // than 'all'. If a subnet does not have reservations at all, the reservation
  43. // lookup can be skipped altogether (reservation-mode is set to 'disabled').
  44. // Note that the second reservation is for an address which is within the
  45. // range of the pool of the dynamically allocated address. The server will
  46. // exclude this address from this pool and only assign it to the client which
  47. // has a reservation for it.
  48. "subnet4": [
  49. {
  50. "pools": [ { "pool": "192.0.2.1 - 192.0.2.200" } ],
  51. "subnet": "192.0.2.0/24",
  52. "interface": "eth0",
  53. "reservation-mode": "out-of-pool",
  54. "reservations": [
  55. // This is a reservation for a specific hardware/MAC address. It's a very
  56. // simple reservation: just an address and nothing else.
  57. {
  58. "hw-address": "1a:1b:1c:1d:1e:1f",
  59. "ip-address": "192.0.2.201"
  60. },
  61. // This is a reservation for a specific client-id. It also shows
  62. // the this client will get a reserved hostname. A hostname can be defined
  63. // for any identifier type, not just client-id.
  64. {
  65. "client-id": "01:11:22:33:44:55:66",
  66. "ip-address": "192.0.2.202",
  67. "hostname": "special-snowflake"
  68. },
  69. // The third reservation is based on DUID. This reservation also
  70. // defines special option values for this particular client. If
  71. // the domain-name-servers option would have been defined on a global,
  72. // subnet or class level, the host specific values take preference.
  73. {
  74. "duid": "01:02:03:04:05",
  75. "ip-address": "192.0.2.203",
  76. "option-data": [ {
  77. "name": "domain-name-servers",
  78. "data": "10.1.1.202,10.1.1.203"
  79. } ]
  80. },
  81. // The fourth reservation is based on circuit-id. This is an option inserted
  82. // by the relay agent that forwards the packet from client to the server.
  83. // In this example the host is also assigned vendor specific options.
  84. {
  85. "client-id": "01:11:22:33:44:55:66",
  86. "ip-address": "192.0.2.204",
  87. "option-data": [
  88. {
  89. "name": "vivso-suboptions",
  90. "data": "4491"
  91. },
  92. {
  93. "name": "tftp-servers",
  94. "space": "vendor-4491",
  95. "data": "10.1.1.202,10.1.1.203"
  96. }
  97. ]
  98. },
  99. // This reservation is for a client that needs specific DHCPv4 fields to be
  100. // set. Three supported fields are next-server, server-hostname and
  101. // boot-file-name
  102. {
  103. "client-id": "01:0a:0b:0c:0d:0e:0f",
  104. "ip-address": "192.0.2.205",
  105. "next-server": "192.0.2.1",
  106. "server-hostname": "hal9000",
  107. "boot-file-name": "/dev/null"
  108. },
  109. // This reservation is using flexible identifier. Instead of relying on specific
  110. // field, sysadmin can define an expression similar to what is used for client
  111. // classification, e.g. substring(relay[0].option[17],0,6). Then, based on the
  112. // value of that expression for incoming packet, the reservation is matched.
  113. // Expression can be specified either as hex or plain text using single
  114. // quotes.
  115. // Note: flexible identifier requires flex_id hook library to be loaded to work.
  116. {
  117. "flex-id": "s0mEVaLue",
  118. "ip-address": "192.0.2.206"
  119. }
  120. ]
  121. }
  122. ]
  123. },
  124. // The following configures logging. It assumes that messages with at least
  125. // informational level (info, warn, error and fatal) should be logged to stdout.
  126. "Logging": {
  127. "loggers": [
  128. {
  129. "name": "kea-dhcp4",
  130. "output_options": [
  131. {
  132. "output": "stdout"
  133. }
  134. ],
  135. "severity": "INFO"
  136. }
  137. ]
  138. }
  139. }