New features in DHCP for Windows Server 2008 R2 / Windows 7
What are the major changes?
The DHCP server in Windows Server 2008 R2 has invested in the areas of security, reliability, manageability and usability. Similarly on the DHCP Client in Windows 7 has invested on certain optimization for obtaining IP Address.
The following changes are available in DHCP server in Windows Server 2008 R2:
· Supports MAC address based network access control mechanism, with the Link Layer based Filtering feature. With this feature DHCP Administrator can control issuance/denial of DHCP leases/IP addresses.
· Supports prevention of name squatting issues caused due to non-Windows OS machines, with the Name Protection feature. Using this feature one could prevent registration of non-Windows OS machine with a same name that is already registered for another machine in DNS Server.
· Supports prevention of exhaustion of IP addresses at scope level especially for the deployments catering to redundancy/high-availability scenarios like Split-Scope. This feature is available only for IPv4 network and not for IPv6 network as in case of latter exhaustion of addresses is not an issue.
· Supports DHCP activity logging, allows DHCP Administrators to monitor the configuration changes of the DHCP Servers. DHCP Administrators would use this feature for network security / IT compliance auditing purposes.
· Supports migration of DHCP Server role using Windows Server Migration Tool (WSMT).
· DHCP Server service is moved under Network Service account from Local Service account. With this the DHCP Server service that runs in the context of the Network Service account presents the computer's credentials to remote servers. Also the advantage with Network Service is it has very few privileges and can do less damage on the server if compromised.
· Usability and operability enhancements of DHCP Server like:
- Auto-population of certain network interface fields like DNS Server addresses (both IPv4 and IPv6), WINS Server addresses, during installation and configuration of scope.
- Interpretive Icons for better readability.
- Wizard based split-scope configuration for ease and error free split-scope deployment.
- Address leases to filter (multiple select supported) for ease of Link Layer based filter configuration for leased clients.
- Address leases to reservation (multiple select supported) for ease of reservation configuration for leased clients.
- In the product scenario/task based help content for Windows Server 2008 R2 features.
· Supports DHCPv6 Option 15 (User Class). This is used by client to identify the type or category of user or application it represents. It involves both DHCP Server and Client side implementation.
· Support of DHCPv6 Option 32 (Information Refresh Time). This specifies an upper bound for how long a client should wait before refreshing information retrieved from DHCPv6. It involves both DHCP Server and Client side implementation.
· Better performance and scalability achieved through lease database caching. Read more about it here.
The DHCP client of Windows 7 has support for optimization to obtain IP Address using SSID caching.
· Supports SSID caching so that, laptop devices with Windows 7 could get IP Address in a lesser time in a Wireless LAN network during revisits to the same.
· Extended NDF and unified tracing to support additional scenario.
· Broadcast bit flag behaviour is updated to toggle between ‘0’ and ‘1’ and also would cache the last successful broadcast bit setting for which the client received IP Address. This way it would ensure the client to acquire the address properly, irrespective of the support for the flag by the 3rd party DHCP Server Relay Agent.
· Support of DHCPv6 Option 32 (Information Refresh Time). This specifies an upper bound for how long a client should wait before refreshing information retrieved from DHCPv6.
Team DHCP
Comments
Anonymous
January 01, 2003
The DHCP server in Windows Server 2008 R2 has invested in the areas of security, reliability, manageabilityAnonymous
January 01, 2003
Thanks Imran! It will be great if you could share feedback on any product functionality missing in Windows DHCP server which is the reason for the current deployment in your organization.Anonymous
January 01, 2003
By proxy server, do you mean DHCP relay agent. If so, the proxy server (relay) needs to be configured with IP address of the DHCP server and not the other way around.Anonymous
January 01, 2003
214 Microsoft Team blogs searched, 101 blogs have new articles in the past 7 days. 237 new articles foundAnonymous
January 01, 2003
Windows Server 08 R2 has Clustering and 80:20 (with secondary server delay)support for Higher availability .Anonymous
January 01, 2003
In Dhcpv4 u can configure a delay on the scope which you want to give lesser preference. You can get more information here http://blogs.technet.com/teamdhcp/archive/2009/01/22/how-to-prevent-address-exhaustion-from-secondary-server-in-split-scope-deployment.aspx -TusharAnonymous
January 01, 2003
Windows Server 2008 as well as Windows Server 2008 R2 support option 121 classless static routes. This can configured as a server or scope option. Is that what you were looking for. PrasadAnonymous
January 01, 2003
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January 01, 2003
Imran, hope that you had a chance to review the new functionality in Windows Server 2012 i.e. DHCP Failover, DHCP policies, DHCP PowerShell cmdlets and IPAM.Anonymous
January 01, 2003
In DHCPv6, there is provision at the protocol level for a server preference field which is supported by Windows DHCP server. For DHCPv4 however, there is no such provision at the protocol level. Configuring delay at the scope level would be the way to go. PrasadAnonymous
January 01, 2003
You mention that you don't have IP address exhaustion protection for IPv6. Does this mean that a client can request an unlimited number of IA_NA leases? If that's the case, isn't this a potential DOS attack, since the server has to maintain state for each lease?Anonymous
January 01, 2003
I'm also curious about RickC's question. Any known issues when using netsh to import into 2K8 R2? We currently have two 2008 DHCP servers and we are looking to migrate over to R2. Also what is Microsoft's stance on managing the R2 servers from older support tools such as the 2K3 admin pack?Anonymous
January 01, 2003
I applied the hotfix and now I'm having a different problem after applying last month patches. the DHCP servers are loosing the router setting and changing the lease renew from 30 to 0 days. I have several scopes with the same problem. I experience the same problem in two servers. I don't which patch is causing the problem.Anonymous
January 01, 2003
It is not possible to specify Ipv6 scope prefix length other than 64 in Win2k8 R2. Can you please provide more information regarding why this is needed.Anonymous
January 01, 2003
I am not sure about the post, but AFAIK you can implement a callout dll which would delay your offer by 5 secs. You register this callout dll on secondary server. You can get a lot of material about writing callout dlls for MS dhcp server, one of which is http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/aa363389(VS.85).aspx Thanks, Subhash BadriAnonymous
January 01, 2003
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January 01, 2003
You can convert your active leases into reservations, starting with Windows Server 2008 R2. Ajay Team DHCPAnonymous
January 01, 2003
The DHCP server in Windows Server 2008 R2 has invested in the areas of security, reliability, manageabilityAnonymous
January 01, 2003
Hi Josh, For setting up reservations, the reservedIP needs to be in the address range configured for the scope. Allowing of creation of reservations outside the range was causing some undesirable behavior – scope configuration getting wiped out. Hence, this change was done in Windows Server 2008 R2. However, a reservation can be in the exclusion range of the scope as a reservation gets preference over exclusion. Thanks, Prasad Team DHCPAnonymous
January 01, 2003
Hi Ken, Thanks for your feedback. If I understood your request correctly, you are looking for a dialogue which allows for providing a name and description to the reservation while converting a lease to a reservation. Is that correct. Prasad Team DHCPAnonymous
January 01, 2003
I have a problem with reservations in Windows 2008 r2. If I have more than one reservation the reservation is lost after one day or more when I have two Windows 2008 r2 DHCP servers in the network. Using only one windows 2008 r2 dhcp server works fine. The problem arises when the second dhcp server enters the network. Right now I am using two Windows 2008 servers and then everything works as per design. I have reinstalled the w2k8r2 servers several times, I have tried using the bootp setting, the dhcp setting and the setting named both. When I am setting it up I am using best practices 80/20 with exclusions for the addresses that belong to the other dhcp server. I have been using Windows 2008 dhcp for two years and never had a problem with this setup. Can you tell my why I am having this problem with windows 2008 r2 dhcp?Anonymous
January 01, 2003
Hi Mikael, Look at the blog post at: http://blogs.technet.com/teamdhcp/archive/2010/04/19/dhcp-server-deletes-reservations.aspx Thanks, Prasad Team DHCPAnonymous
April 29, 2009
>>Address leases to reservation (multiple select supported) for ease of reservation configuration for leased clients. We have been wanting this for years!!!!! There is no reason I shouldn't be able to right-click a lease and convert it to a reservation!Anonymous
May 27, 2009
Hi, I know this query is way off topic but was wondering if there is a posssibility to give preference to a particular DHCP server [maybe using Server IP in the DHCP Offer]? This is purely for use in a lab environment? Any suggestions would be greatly helpful! --AshwinAnonymous
June 13, 2009
Hi there, Are there any options to use Windows Server 2008 to issue classless static routes? This feature is available in Windows Server 2003 DHCPs I dun see that its configurable in WIndows Server 2008... please advice any workaround in R2?Anonymous
June 25, 2009
Will DHCP in 2008R2 be FULLY controllable from Powershell? In all previous versions there has not even been so much as a MOF to allow queries/control via WMI.Anonymous
June 29, 2009
Hi, I've read a post some time ago that contained VB code to compile a DLL that should be registerred on the Windows 2003 DHCP server of which you want to delay the DHCP offer by for example 5 seconds. Do you know about this article? It's something I want to implement at this moment because we don't have the opportunity to implement 2008R2 at this moment (yet) but still require a stand-by DHCP server that should respond a few seconds after the primary server. I hope you know about this. Thanks, EricAnonymous
January 04, 2010
I echo a comment earlier about waiting for years for the ability to convert a lease into a reservation. Unfortunately, I rarely use the leased IP address when making a reservation. A huge step forward, just stopped short of perfect. Please add the reservation edit form before the reservation is saved.Anonymous
January 20, 2010
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February 24, 2010
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December 03, 2010
Is there a way to add this ability to Filter DHCP, Allows & Denys to Windows Server 2008 without going to R2?Anonymous
March 17, 2011
Is it still advisable to use best practices 80/20 if you have 2 DHCP servers running Win2008 R2 in the network? or there is a better way for load sharing and failover. ThanksAnonymous
May 04, 2011
Your team blog shows DHCP migration from 2003 servers to 2008 server using netsh commands. Does this also apply to 2008 R2? Is there any problem moving from 2003 R2 32bit to 2008 R2?Anonymous
May 25, 2011
What about IPv6 scope prefixes? In Dibbler (open source DHCPv6) you can define prefixes that are longer than /64. In Windows 2008 you can't. Is it possible to define your own masks, being longer than /64 for subnets in R2?Anonymous
November 18, 2012
I have Win 2008 server as DHCP and is connected via router. The router is the default gateway to the internet. How can I point the DHCP server to use the proxy server automatically. Im using Fedora/linux as my proxy server... need help ThanksAnonymous
May 04, 2013
DHCP in Server 2008 R2 has best performance, But most of the organisation used dhcp in router.